AIB-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, Fabmary 10, 1991 At 71, Bishop Keeps On Hauling (Continued from Pago A 1) then, they were moving mostly their own stock. “But people got to saying, ‘Would you take a calf along for me?’” And so a business was bom and with it a family tradition. Today, the Super Duty Ford with the 12-foot bed and aluminum sides —“Robert G. Bishop & Son” emblazoned proudly on the cab—is a familiar sight to farmers in the five-county area that strad dles the Maryland-Pennsylvania border. Bishop and his son Benn bought the truck last April with 54,000 miles on it. The gauge now stands at 66,800. Their first truck, a simi lar Super Duty which they con tinue to use, has logged more than 250,000 miles. At Robert G. Bishop & Son “Livestock Dealing and Trucking” in Gettysburg, the work day usually starts at 8 a.m. or shortly after. The company headquarters is a telephone and a Rolodex of customer phone numbers, both precariously balanced on top of a clothes dryer in the farm kitchen. Company meetings are held at lunchtime when Benn comes in from his full-tune job at a local sawmill and Bob takes a break from the day’s pickups. The firm’s executive secretary is a white haired woman with a friendly smile who’s been the queen of Bishop’s heart since they met 45 years ago when he was making the hay at her daddy’s place. The former Betty Wenschhof was home from college that summer. On the last day Bishop toiled in her family’s fields—the hot July sun sweltering above—the pretty co-ed took pity on the lanky farm boy and invited him in for dinner. As he left, he thought he should return the hospitality. So he asked her out, tossing the offer across the front porch, wondering how she’d answer. He knew, he recalls now, that she wouldn’t take him seriously. “But I said, ‘l’ll see you at seven.’ She wasn’t ready when I came at seven,” Bob said with a chuckle. “But she got ready,” he said, remembering blue eyes twinkling. On Thanksgiving Day of that same year. Bishop bought the farm they still own. In the mean time, Betty finished her courses at Shippens burg College and earned her teaching degree. OnJuly 19,1952, they married and then left on their honeymoon an 8,000 mile trip cross country in a 1950 Chevy. That trip, and a two-week tour of New Eng land to celebrate their 25th anniversary, are the only vacations they’ve ever taken. Those brief adventures and eight weeks spent recov ering from a hernia mark about the only time Bishop has missed the area’s weekly lives tock sales. Along the way they had three daughters Bobbi Jo, Bonn! and Beth in addition to son, Benn. Now there are in-laws and six grandchildren to complete the family. - And still Bishop hauls, his days planned around the animals that must be delivered and many a night spent standing ‘round a sale ring. His devotion to the auctions might have driven a lesser woman mad. But Betty is made of stronger stuff than that. She works around his calendar, arrang ing family get-togethers and holiday dinners at a time and sometimes even a day more convenient for him. A “behind-the-scenes” partner in the busi ness that Bishop has built, she is the appoint ment taker, the receptionist, and even an assistant livestock handler when the need arises. homemade jelly, so sweet and good he almost eats it straight off the spoon. Bishop’s birthday—as typical a day as any began with a trip to Don Mason’s farm in New Free dom Township where he picked up a few fat steers and took them for butchering at Norman J. Shriver, Jr.’s in Emmitsbuig, Md. Conscientious to a fault. Bishop said he likes to get animals sche duled for slaughtering to the butch er’s as soon as possible “so if something kicks up, they’re already in.” Rumbling down the road in the morning cold. Bishop steers like the former schoolbus driver he is. Thirty-five years hauling other people’s children and his own in addition to his livestock dealing have taught him to be gentle with his cargo. Bishop’s trucked hogs, sheep, and goats in his time. He even “took a flittin’” back in 1948 and In Conservation Tillage, Roundup' Ultra Give Weeds Chance. This spring, you’ll only get one chance to get your fields off y to a good, clean start. You can’t afford to take unneces- sary risks with a burndown treatment that doesn’t eliminate weeds the first time around. That’s why more farmers In fact, Roundup Ultra controls use Roundup® Ultra herbicide for all their preplant needs. Controls non woods Texas panicum, smartweed, sicklepod, provides complete control of tar Bet Roundup Ultra delivers the broadest spectrum of weed control. morningglory, plus tall weeds Gramoxone burns back only the top Benn Bishop, left, and Bob Bishop, right, most dally for lunch at the family farm to discuss the day’s chores. Together they run Robert G. Bishop & Son, a longtime lives tock dealing and trucking firm In Adams County. hired out to move a man’s belong ings to Palm Beach, Fla. Ocassion ally, he’s still asked to take a load of horses to New Holland, Pa. But it's the cattle dairy and beef that are the lifeblood of Bishop & Son. Bishop attends auc tions in Greencastle on Monday and Thursday. Westminster, Md. on Tuesday and Hagerstown, Md. over 100 different species, eliminating tough weeds like johnsongrass, marestail, barnyardgrass and on Wednesday. While there aren’t near as many haulers in business as when Bishop began, trucking livestock is still a much-needed agricultural service. that herbicides ! Gramoxone* can Roundup Ultra also keeps perennials in ch» unlike other products. What really separates Roundup Ultra from the competition is regiowth prevention. Roundup Ultra weeds - all the way down to the toots.