THE FAMILY GROWS ALONG WITH VEGETABLES By 1945, optimists saw the end of the war but not the end of “gar dening for victory.” Even Presi dent Roosevelt had to ask people to continue gardening. Was Victory Gardening suc cessful? In 1944, 40% of all the fresh vegetables in the United Sta tees were grown in Victory Gar dens. In 1995, vegetable gardens are not nearly as common. Today, less than 18% of the gardening public grows vegetables. Victory Gardens had the whole family involved including the fp If I w** J 3553 agrl systems Wort Northeast Agri Systems, Inc. Flyway Business Park hours ' , * . j \. ... . « . Sat. 8:00 to Noon 139 A West Airport Road 24 Hr 7 Day Repair Service Lltltz, PA 17543 Ph: (717) 569-2702 1-800-673-2580 *55 children. Here’s two victory gar dening memories of children working in the garden. The children did help in the Vic tory Gardens—there was no lay ing in bed. The sun rose and you got up and put on your old boots and cbthes and went out and helped in the garden. One of the more trying times was when the potato bugs were bad. We got up before the dew was off the plants. My father would put lime in a bur lap sack and we dusted each pota to plant. The lime would get in our noses and eyes. We'd be sore be fore the potato patch was com- iff W*'* nnovation. Quality. Durability. These traits have been the foundation of Chore-Time’s product leadership in the poultry feeding industry for ▼ over 40 years. Our continuing philosophy is to develop and manufac ture innovative systems users consider the best in the world. Nothing else works better, lasts longer, or is more reliable than Chore-Time. Contact us today and put Chore-Time's product leadership to work for you. Authorized 181881- master pletely limed. Being a child in elementary school during the war, my parents moved to a Northern York County home with a I'A -acre truck patch. I remember feeling like Alice in Wonderland. I had aisles going down the middle of tall corn and sections of peas, beans, and what ever. You could go out and break ■apod open and wow: a black-eyed pea. I remember going into a neighboring corn field andfollow ing a trailing pumpkin vine to a huge jack-o-lantern. Victory gardeners of all ag& did a lot of raking. They started by raking out lumps of dirt or stones that might hinder seedling growth and development of plants. When planting small seeds. Victory Gardeners needed to make sure their rows were straight and uniform. They used a string as a guide. Also, they used the handle of a hoe and covered the seeds lightly with 14 inch or so of soil. Use a hoe or scuffle hoe to remove weeds while they are small. Onion sets are sown as eariy in the spring as possible. Place them about 4 inches apart in the row. A paper collar around the base of plants like tomatoes, sunk in the ground about 1 inch will help to keep cutworms Grom cutting the plants off at ground level. A small piece of paper layed flat on the soil around cabbage kept cabbage maggots from attaching the roots. Large insects like Colorado potato beetles can be crushed between the thumb and forefinger. GETTYSBURG (Adams Co.) Terri Lynne Packard has been appointed to the Penn State Uni versity Cooperative Extension staff as 4-H/youth agent and as signed to Adams County. A native of Troy in Bradford County, she prepared for college at Troy High School and earned her bachelor of science degree from Penn State in June 1993, ma joring in dairy and animal science. While in college, Packard was active in the Dairy Science Club, served as an advocate for the Col lege of Agricultural Sciences, and was president of Sigma Alpha, a FWPI FEDERALSBURQ, Md. 305 UNIVERSITY AVE. H (Formerly Long Lumber) T-800-735-5361 STORE HOURS; 7:30 A.M. -4:30 P.M. Monday-Friday SAT. 8 A.M. - 11 A.M. Uncatttr Farming, Saturday, May 13, 1995-B5 Packard Joins Adams County Extension A Natural Disinfectant and Fly Control Spraying Barns, Fences and Historic Homes Serving South Eastern Pa, Delaware, Maryland and New Jersey Shine On Brightly Custom White Washing John H. Blackburn 58 North Main St., Port Deposit, MD. 21904 (410) 378-5000 Call Anytime Multi Fuel Furnaces & Boilers Wood, Coal & Oil 1 Ai' ■ a Also Outdoor Boilers and wood & coal models PENN MFC. CO. 393 W. Lexington Rd. t Lititz, PA 17543 Call (717) 626-1397 or 627-2303 Interested in staking? He beans to poles so they climb naturally from left to right; otherwise they may slide down the pole. Toma toes trained on a 6-foot pole set firmly in the ground will produce earlier, firmer fruit that is cleaner and disease-free. Fasten ties to the stakes every 12 inches. Allow blossoms to swing free of the stakes. professional agricultural soronty. She served as manager of the stu dent Dairy Exposition and editor of the Dairyman. A member of the Dairy Judging Team, she was named 1991 Distinguished Junior Member by the Pennsylvania Hol stein Association and, in 1993, was named Outstanding Senior in Dairy Science at Penn State. During the summer of her col lege years, Packard worked on the family farm, Pack-Herd Holsteins, with her patents Mr. and Mrs. Richard Packard and a younger sister and brother, and cared for her own herd of 20 cows. Following graduation she worked as Marketing Promotion Coordinator for Sire Power, Inc., Tunkhannock, until March 1994, when she assumed the extension dairy agent responsibilities in Bradford County while the agent was on assignment in Poland. Since December 1994, she has filled the dairy agent position in Susquehanna County while that agent took the Poland assignment