Onbei a farm -And o bazar Joyce B' I miss the flag. When our service men and women began shipping out for Desert Storm, Old Glory waved numerous home around our neighborhood. “Wish we had flag up on top of the silo,” I said to our son one day, after he commented on the out pouring of community flag support. “I’ll put one up,” he promptly volunteered. And soon after, a flag waved from a sturdy pole he had fastened at the top of the 80-fect high haylage silo. We all felt good about the flag waving there, our own little way of honoring our military serving around the world. Desert Storm became part of history. A series of rain and high wind storms eventually bent the pole and shredded our flag. Our son climbed the silo to retrieve the tattered Stars and Stripes for prop er disposal. I miss that flag. I miss its con stant reminder, as it flapped and snapped in the breeze, of the free doms our brave men and women have gone to war over the centu ries to uphold. Freedoms we take for granted, freedoms we abuse, freedoms we have to fight for someday right in our own back yards or back forty. With each annual Memorial y rj CLOSED SUNDAYS, NEW YEAR, EASTER MONDAY, ASCENSION DAY, WOT MONDAY, OCT. 11, THANKSGIVING, f«IIHTIIt CHRISTMAS A DECEMBER MTH. FISHER’S FURNITURE. INC. NEW AND USED FURNITURE USED COAL A WOOD HEATERS COUNTRY FURNITURE A ANTIQUES BUS. HRS: BOX 57 MON.-THURS. 8-5 1129 GEORGETOWN RD. FRI. 8-8, SAT. 8-12 BART, PA 17503 GOOD FOOD OUTLET STORES See Our Original Line Of Golden Barrel Products Plus All Kinds Of Beans, Candies, Dried Fruit, Snack Mixes, Etc. At Reduced Prices * BAKING MOLASSES ft MAPLE SYRUP * PANCAKE & WAFFLE * BARBADOS MOLASSES * PANCAKE ft WAFFLE MIX * * BLACKSTRAP SYRUPS * ASSORTMENT OF ikr MOLASSES * SORGHUM SYRUP CANDIES * m n B? 1 * * corn syrups * uquid ft DRY sugars ft DREDmJTr HIGH FRUCTOSE * CANOLA OIL * U*. . jftj, SYRUPS * COCONUT OIL * W ' i ft CORN OIL * T.TTTTrD V* * ' 1 * ! ; ft COTTONSEED OIL I p* s I i , r h)l If your local store a niJVP OIL * BAUMAN APPIX 010 VI ■ not have it. o!L BUTTERS SEND FOR ft KAUFFAMN PRESERVES FREE * vmp MIX * SPRING GLEN RELISHES BROCHURE * SHOO-FLY PIE MIX Processors Of Syrups. Molasses, rawing (His, Funnel Cskc Mix. Fancoke k Waffle Ifflx k Shoofly Pie Mix GOOD FOOD OUTLET Located At Good Food, Inc. W. Main St, Box 160, Honey Brook. PA 19344 218-273-3776 1-800-327-4406 Located At L & S Sweeteners 388 E. Main St. toola, PA 17540 717-686-3486 1-800-633-2676 v - WE UPS DAILY - Day, it seems our freedoms are increasingly threatened not by totalitarian societies intent on revising the world order but by ourselves. Our freedom is in dan ger from over-taxing, over regulation, over-whelming growth of the bureaucracy and over burdening the productive segment of society with support of the non productive. Freedom, sadly, generates apathy. Far too few voters made the effort to cast their ballot in the recent primary election. But those responsible folks who did seemed to loudly shout “Enough!” to end less government spending. Among them are farmers whose food-producing fields do not con tinually add to population growth (’ccpt for groundhogs!), do not demand addidohnal police, educa tion complexes, transportation facilities, recreational areas, water, sewer or more landfills. Yet, farmland taxes, like all prop erty taxes, continue to rise to pay for services demanded by growing communities. Farmland preservation is “polit ically correct" at the moment. It’s also a common-sense move to assure land for growing food and not shopping malls for our grand children’s grandchildren. Well, maybe.' Taxes and regula- JAAL The Antique Engine, Tractor and Toy Club. Inc. will hold its Bth annual Show on June 4, S, and 6. This show will be at the Kemp- tions, while certainly necessary, pose significant threats to agricul ture if they continue in unabated proliferation. What value preser vation if a property can’t be pro ductive with practicality or afford able to cultivate? Nutrient management legisla tion recently passed in Fannsylva nia will ultimately regulate how many animals can be maintained on a certain size farm. Now, prop osals are being presented that would regulate the use of water for agriculture in the Susquehanna Basin. (“Sorry, Bossy old girl. I know it’s 95-degrees out there but you drank your allotment this morning.”) Wetlands, endangered species, pollution, energy, conservation are all controversial issues with long-term impact to agriculture’s ability to keep producing cheap and abundant food, a key reason America has remained so prosper ous over the centuries. Certainly, we need guiding legislation in all these areas, admi nistered with common sense. But legislation produces regulations, which produce administering bureaucrats, which produce more legislation which produce more regulations and on and on. which taxes rise endlessly to pay. Enough is enough, already. For Memorial Day, I’d like to put a flag back up to proclaim my beliefs in the freedoms for which this country has always stood. Sometimes. I’m not quite sure I know exactly what they are anymore. But, thank God still for the free dom to publicly say that, (end) s®? INC. Hearth Products • Gas Grills • Casual Furniture 906 E. Main SL (Rt 322) Ephrata, PA 1 Block East of Rt 222 (717) 733-4973 -- ■ 1-800-642-0310 HflSn Mon.. Tun.. Wod. 10 to 6 |aiaU Thun., Fri. 10 to (; Sol. 10 to 4 SPECIALS FOR THE MONTH OF JUNE GOLDEN BARREL SORGHUM SYRUP 18 os. Regularly $3.68 ROW $3.29 GOLDEN BARREL VEGETABLE OIL V 4 Gallon Regularly $3.09 now $1.79 BUT 2 BAGS OF CANDY ft GET A CANDY JAR FREE Anti que Tractor Show ton Community Center located on PA Route 143 North of the Kemp ton exit of Interstate 78. Friday, setup will begin at 8 a.m. and con tinue throughout the day. An added attraction this year will be organized tractor pulling by the Pennsylvania Tractor Pullers Association. Tractor pulling will begin at 6:30 Friday evening with the 5,500, 7,500 and 9,500 pound stock tractors followed by the 8,000 and 10,000 turbo modified stock classes. Exhibitors of the engine club will be running anti que engines and farm equipment during all days and evenings. On Saturday morning the slow engine contest will begin at 11 a.m. followed by the antique trac tor parade at noon. At 1 p.m. there will be a slow tractor race, 2 p.m. a teeter totter competition and 3 p.m. antique tractor pulling. To qualify as an antique tractor for the competition the manufacturing date of the tractor must be before 1959 and the tractor may not be modified. Following the antique pull the 11,500, 13,500, 15,500 pound stocks and any 10,000 and 12,000 turbo modified stocks that have not competed will be run. Choose Work Clothes That Make Sense 'Farmers, like others who work outdoors, are at increased risk for skin cancer and other conditions related to overexposure to the sun’s harmful rays. While unnoticeable from one year to the next, over a lifetime, skin damage can become chronic. With the longer work days and more outdoor work spring and summer bring, farm workers need to don appropriate protective clothing. It’s particularly important to keep children’s protected from the sun’s ultraviolet rays. Since most of an individuals’ lifetime expo sure occurs before the age of 18, taking small precautions now can help to prevent serious health problems in the future. Many agricultural workers wear a baseball-style cap to shield their eyes, leaving the back of the neck and ears exposed. A better cap design for sun protection has a Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 29,1993-B3 Sunday morning at 11 a.m. there will be a slow engine contest (winners of the previous day may not compete) and at noon an anti que tractor parade. At 1 p.m. there will be a kiddie pedal pull, 2 p.m. a barrel rolling contest and 3 p.m. a blindfold driving contest At 1 p.m. tractor pulling will be con tinued with the class to be announced followed by two clas ses of 4 wheel drive stock truck, pulling. There will be flea market, crafts and vendors spaces available for the duration of the show. Antique car and truck owners or clubs are invited to exhibit. Over night, self contained camping will be permit ted. Refreshments and bake sale items will be available. A parking donation of $2 per car will be requested at the gate. No alcoholic beverages will be allowed upon the show grounds. For more information about the show or flea market space contact David Semmel, Show Secretary at 5731 Paradise Road, Slatington, PA 18080 or call him at (215) 767-4768. Tractor pullers can contact Gerald F. Miller, PA Trac tor Pullers Assoc., 6432 Abbey Road, Wind Gap, PA 18091 or call (215) 863-8060. panel around the back to protect the neck and ears from sun dam age. A wide-brimmed straw hat also offers good protection. Many styles are available to suit your personal taste and work needs. It may be tempting, particularly for young men, to go shirtless while working in the sun and heat. But keep your shirt on. It will pro tect your skin from sunburn, fly ing debris, scratches and insect stings. Choose clothing that is loose fitting but without extra material which may get caught in machinery or snagged on tree limbs. ' Wear sunscreen on exposed areas such as the face and fore arms. To be effective, the sunsc reen should be applied about 30 minutes before you go out. Even on hazy days, enough ultraviolet radiation can reach you to cause skin damage if you’re not protected.