r We’ve just had a family reunion at a pavilion in a nearby Com munity Park. The playground equipment and picnic food was just what the children wanted. About one-third of our group were very young and full of energy. But, some of the older ones played basketball and discovered that they weren’t as young as they thought they were as their muscles ached afterwards. There was lots of food left over even though the people picked at the desserts all afternoon. There were three bowls of potato salad, plus chicken and ham salad. The platter of red beet eggs were quickly eaten. I took a jug of plain KEN CLUGSTON (717) 665-6775 CRAFT-BILT CONSTRUCTION INC. FARM-HOME BUILDING 1242 Breneman Road MANHEIM, PA 17545 PH: (717) 665-4372 BUILDING & REMODELING FOR— DAIRY RESIDENTIAL SWINE POLE BUILDINGS BEEF STORAGE CUSTOM MADE FEED BINS FOR FARMS FEED MILLS • Made of 13 gauge Steel • All welded seams • Gravity Flow or Auger Free Estimates Also - Steel Roof Trusses for Buildings - Portable Hog Buildings • Bucket Elevators - Grain Augers Distributors - Flow Pipes & Accessories We Sell, Service & Install Ph: 717-345-3724 Fax: 717-345-2294 STOLTZFUS WELDING SHOP Owner - Samuel P. Stoltzfus RD 3, Box 331 Pine Grove. PA 17963 Ida's Notebook Ida Rlsser ice water, as I prefer it to tea or soft drinks, and it was all used be fore the afternoon was over. The one drawback to the park was the fact that the children had to cross a road to get to the play ground. And, sometimes they got so excited and forgot to look both ways. Even on the deadend road that we live along, there are cars and trucks to watch out for every day. Our grandson from Georgia vis ited for a week and rode a bicycle between our house and the farm. I worried that, with the com grow ing so tall, he might meet a truck at a turn in the road. He and his sister certainly enjoyed the farm and also the chance to play with their cousins. Thank goodness, they brought boots and work shoes along as there is lots of man ure and dirt that can be dragged in to the house. When I pick blueberries the three-year-old helps me but he on ly wants the “big” berries for his mother and so when I'pick two quarts, he only has a dozen or two “big” ones. Of course, he found a lot to cat. It is a pleasure to have him help me pick our purple string beans too as it makes the job easi er. For a free brochure about your cholesterol level, write: LDL Cholesterol, Sigma Diagnostics, S4S South Ewing Avenue, St. Louis, MO 63103. Free information about trips to Kyoto, Japan and a 1,200 th anniversary travel package is available b> calling Westin Hotels & Resorts at 800-228-3000. For free information on prostate disease, call 1-800-564-6666, the toll-free hotline of the campaign “Keep Your Health Up To Par.” This campaign of the American Foundation for Urologic Disease and the Senior PGA TOUR is sup ported by an educational grant from TAP Pharmaceuticals Inc. and Abbott Laboratories. Increase your wheat yield by Hoffman 89 Average % Advantage in 89 Average % Advantage A lot of effort and resources go into your growing investment. There’s the labor to plant, monitor and harvest your crop. The tremen dous investment in land and equipment. And the knowledge and experience you’ve accumu lated over the years. With all that’s riding on your choice, you’ll want a wheat variety that will produce for you in the field. And none surpass Hoffman 89. Superior Test Weights. In three-year tnals conducted by Penn State and the Univer sity of Maryland, Hoffman 89 registered the top test weight across all locations, in some cases approaching 62 Ib/Bu. In Lancaster County 0 Hoffman Seeds, Inc , Landisville, PA 17538 Call Toll Free: 1-800-776-7929 Adding Value to your Seed Investment © 1994 Hoffman Seeds, Inc 61.9 Ib/Bu 83 Bu/A 60.2 Ib/Bu 74 Bu/A 3% 12% Bushel Weight Grain Yield 59.8 Ib/Bu 103 Bu/A 56.6 Ib/Bu 97 Bu/A 6% 6% Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 13 199+83 Ag Progress Plans Activities For Families (Condnwd from Pag* 82) toys from common household materials. Don’t miss the insea petting zoo featuring hissing cockroaches, large walking sticks, and ladybird beetles. A bcc-kccping display complete with free honey samples and an insect feeding experiment and monitoring station. The zoo is located in the Family and Youth Exhibits Building. Storyteller Jan Kinney will per form in the College of Agricultural Sciences Exhibits Building Theat re for 30 to 45 minutes each day. The Happy Valley Friendly Farm will be next to the Family and Youth Building. Visitors can bottle-feed and touch the animals. Shaver’s Creek Environmental Center will have a tent, displaying wildlife materials and live owls, hawks, turtles and snakes. 4-H and the Foundation for Better Living will also have displays and activi ties for kids. Smokey Bear is expected to be seen wandering the grounds. Those who want to learn more about using computers can visit the (per acre) Test WL Loss (per acre) tnals, its 59.8 Ib/Bu performance produced test weight savings of $7.76. YMd. Supenor test weight isn’t the only advantage offered by Hoffman 89. In Centre County, it delivered 83 Bu/A—l2% above the average. So you’d save $27 per acre using Hoffman 89. Averaging the results of both tnals, you’d earn $26.38 more per acre with Hoffman 89, Make sure you get the most out of your investment by planting a proven winner Hoffman 89. Just another way we add value to your seed investment. computer awareness tables in the Youth Building. •Paste Museum depicts early farm life: More than 300 imple ments from the muscel power era of farming and homemaking, which ended around the time of World War li. Items on display range from 6,000 year-old clay sickle used for grain harvesting to a 175-year-old mechanized apple peeler, to a tum-of-the-century foot-pedaled milking machine. Also featured is a collection of dollhouse-sized kitchen furniture. The collection, built by Work Progress Administration workers in the 19305, includes dry sinks, comer cupboards, a miniature fire place and even a tiny braided rug. Also featured is a collection of full-sized cast-iron cooking pots and copper cooking utensils. Collections of household items, irons, rug beaters, and Held equip ment will be displayed. Many artifacts have been restored to working order so visi tors can turn cranks and pull lev ers. It’s a hands-on history book. (per acre) (per acre! i^r.uu U (per acre) (per acre) 'X>.! b ■( '•i S'