1^^ LP Enjoy The Many Benefits of FOND on YOUR PROPERTY Enhance your Pond with a POND FOUNTAIN • Adds beauty • Aerates Water • Attracts Wildlife • Helpful in reducing algae & pond scum. Also available: Colored lights, wiring, nozzles or fountain heads, Benseal to plug leaky ponds. We Also Install & Sell Pond Liners by the square yard Call for Details • € COCALICO EQUIP. CQ. 'ymmiiF FARM DRAINAGE & EXCAVATING \ C / 323 REINHOLDS RD., DENVER, PA 17517 Ph: 717-336-3808 \/ 717-738-3794 V F«x: 717-336-3809 Let TKrshcv mtm mtm equipment co., inc. do the work! New expanded services from Hershey Equipment include feed mill construction and expansion. Let us do the work and design your storage and handling systems. We have our own experienced crews for service and installation. TKrshcv ■Bl ■■■ EQUIPMENT CO., INC. SYCAMORE IND. PARK 255 PLANE TREE DRIVE LANCASTER, PA 17603 (717)393-5807 - Increased Property Value - Fire Protection - Livestock Watering - Recreation/Conservation - Irrigation Sarah Bedgar (Continued from Pag* B 12) vesting for the past eight yean. The milk ing herd of 78 cows was sold around Easter of this year. Her grandfa ther, Arthur Tracey, also rents the home and acreage where Sarah lives to raise replace ment heifers on. In ad dition to her work at home, the energetic 15-year-old has worked part time at another lo cal dairy farm. Jessica Fritz, the Car roll County Dairy Prin cess, was selected as this year’s Alternate Maryland Dairy Prin cess. Jessica has been a dairy maid for two yean, and is active in the Junior Holstein As sociation, dairy bowl, FFA, and exhibiting Holstein cattle. She is president of the Carroll County Dairy Club. The daughter of Dan iel and Sharon Fritz of New Windsor, Jessica just recently returned from a three-week trip to Europe as a member of the national cham pion Maryland 4-H Dairy Judging team. She is a National Honor Society member, and plans to attend a four- If It s Worth Your Investment Trust It To Hershey Ida’s Notebook by Ida Risser Some summers are dry but so far this year we have had plenty of rain. In fact, we’ve had so much that my garden vegetables are much larger than usual. I’ve given away a dozen large beads of cabbage. The bean stalks are enormous and toppled out of their rows. The one item that is really too prolific is the roly-poly zucchini that I got from Burpee. I’ve given away these round green and white squash and still have too many for myself. The damp soil is good for start ing a new row of strawberries and the sweet potato plants are grow ing fine. Even the edible soybean plants are quite big compared to last year when a groundhog kept nibbling them down to the ground. Talking about rain, last week year college and study handpainted milk can, a dairy science or agricul- baseball autographed ture communications, by Cal “The Milman” A fundraising auc- Rrpkin Jr., and a crystal lion during the evening vase of roses. Denny netted $575 for the Remsburg served as Dairy Princess pro- auctioneer, gram. Three items went Judges for the pag on the auction block: a cant included June Se- Classified ads^ £ PAY OFF! & ga * - my husband and I decided to spend two days at our camper on lack’s Mountain. We took the boat out on the nearby lake and fished all afternoon in an off and on drizzle. Actually, we did not get very wet as we had taken jack ets along with us. Later, Allen slept on the life preservers while I caught seven pan fish. We had the large lake to ourselves until even ing. That night it really rained and it sounded like rain on a tin roof as I remember from my youth. So, we packed up and came home ear lier than planned. Some hay in the meadow beside our house has been laying too long due to the weather. There is alfalfa to be put in the silo too but we need better weather. When it is dry we complain and when it is too wet we don’t like that either. koll, of Culpeper, V A, editor of Farm Chroni cle; Nina Burdette, a farm wife from Mer cersburg; and Dave Paddon, National Hol stein field representa tive for Western New York and Southern PA.