GENUINE ACCO Parts. [AGCO I Annvllle. PA BHM FARM EQUIPMENT 717-867-2211 Auburn. NY MAIN & PINCKNEY EQUIP. 7033 Mutton Hill Road 800-232-0838 Beavertown. PA B & R FARM EQUIPMENT RR 1, Box 2424 (Rt. 522 South) 570-658-8175 Bloomsburq. PA NICHOLS FARM EQUIPMENT RR #9, Box 87 570-784-7731 Carlisle. PA CARLISLE FARM SERVICE 260 York Road 717-243-4419 FARM SVC., INC. 975 South Main St. 717-264-3533 COLUMBIA CROSS ROAD RD 2, Box 62 717-297-3873 Denton. MD SHAFFER EQUIPMENT CO. 26193 Burrsville Road 410-479-1477 ilizabethtowi HERNLEY’S FARM EQUIPMENT 2095 South Market St 717-367-8867 Fontana. PA UMBERGER’S OF FONTANA, INC 8 Miles East of Hershey on Rt. 322 717-867-5161/800-261-2106 Frederick. MD KNOTT & GEISBERT, INC. White - New Idea 3432 Urbana Pike 1-800-255-5549 WERTZFARM EQUIPMENT RD#3, Box 458 (PA Route 516) 717-235-0111 Inaleside. MD GIBSON FARM EQUIPMENT 3120 Goldsboro Road 410-758-0262 Jamesvllle. NY N. PALLADINO & SONS 3140 Sweet Road 315-667-3141 Kiingertown. PA STANLEY’S FARM SERVICE 717-648-2088 Martinsburo. PA BURCHFIELD’S, INC. 112 S Railroad St 814-793-2384 Qneonta. NY SHARON SPRINGS GARAGE 184 East St. 607-432-8411 Pgnn Run. PA manor motors Route 1 724-254-4753 Punxsutawney. PA LONDON FARM SUPPLY 814-938-7444 BasburjL-EA HOLTRY’S WELDING & REPAIR Mam St 717-532-7261 & REPAIR Rt 20 518-284-2346 PA LINCOLN SUPPLY & EQUIPMENT CO. 422 Riggs Road 814-443-1691 AGCO® Hydraulic Cylinders • Superior quality • 30 month warranty • Hard chrome plated • All sizes available Jr? ■ ■ v Cutting V Parts , Tempered Carbon Steel • Cut more acres per dollar l|||iip Black Magic™ sections are available only at your AGCO* Dealer • Designed for heavy duty cranking • Availabe for most applications Washington. PA SCHOTT EQUIPMENT SALES Route 18 North 2075 Henderson Ave 724-222-3780 Making A Difference In The lpr~r~ The AGCO* advantage starts with durability. Our parts are designed to outlast all others, because they're made to fit the unique specifications of the equipment you own, And in the long run that makes a big difference. AGCO® BEARINGS AGCO® BATTERIES Long Run. • Quality OEM Product • Longer Wear and Durability • Large Selection for all Applications CO® CHAIN Complete Selection, priced 'or any budget Superior quality NSI Certified GRUMELU FARM SERVICE 929 Robert Fulton Hwy (Rt 222) 717-786-7318 On Being a Farm Wife (and other hazards) Joyce Bupp The grass has turned a deep, vibrant green. Daffodils gaily nod their cheery heads in the breeze Forsythia bushes glow golden in the sunshine Giddy with the joy and promise of Springtime, we glad ly dig holes in our pocketbooks. Fertilize our gardens with liber al spreading of bucks And bask in the daydreams of color-coordi nated annual borders, picture perfect perennials, and baskets overflowing with mounds of dewy, homegrown vegetables “Grow it. Pick it. Eat it l ” pro claimed a gardening ad that cracked me up as I thumbed through a publication while enjoying my early morning breakfast bagel with cream cheese. Yeah. Right. Just like that. Oh, golly, gee whiz, if it were only that simple. Because the advertisement had to do with planting fruit trees. Years ago, when we first moved onto the farm, there were a couple of old apple trees scat tered around the farmstead Age, building, re-landscaping, even a fire in one started by an electric fence, which slipped off the insulator, took their toll over the years Grow it Pick it. Eat it A fruit tree is a commitment Just ask your local professional orchardist Every plant problem in the book with an inclination toward fruit will know in a moment just the right moment your pet tree is susceptible to bugs, blights, blisters, fungi and assorted infestations. “Do you really want to fiddle with having to spray and prune and fend off frost,” queried The Farmer years ago when we first tossed the fruit tree idea around “When we have orchards a mile up the road?” He reiterated the idea again last year, when I lamented the demise of my strawberry patch and mused about replanting more And, he’s nght With cows to help milk every day, bawling baby calves, and a computer relentless flashing an impatient cursor to “get with it'” our strawberries this year will be U pick. Or, he suggests, pre- EXTENDED PARTS DEPARTMENT STORE HOURS EFFECTIVE MONDAY, APRIL 5, 1999 To Better Serve You During The Busy Planting Season APRIL - MAY - JUNE MON. THRU FRI. 7:00 AM-8:00 PM; SAT. 7:00 AM-3:00 PM FYcUirOCT 133 Rothsville Station Rd. K IrlN^" 1 X P.O. Box 0395, Lititz, PA 17543-0395 BROS. INC. — f (717) 626-4705 1-800-414-4705 Fax 717-626-0996 0 picked. Then there are the blueberry bushes. I’ve planted at least a dozen over the years. Some large potted ones. Some small mail order slips. Some my mom even got for me. We do have one blue berry bush of a few feet high to show for the effort. Despite all gardening admonitions that blueberries need to be grown in pairs, to this bush’s credit, it does bear some fruit in its state of singular bliss. The backyard mockingbirds generally find the berries before I do Fruit cultivation is a commit ment; I obviously don’t have that commitment. Nor do I particu larly relish gnarled, wormy apples or frozen peach tree blos soms or tending to a pear tree which may or may not choose to yield I have grown soft and depen dent on the efforts of our good neighbors who as professionals do this so efficiently. Last mid-summer, The Farmer came home from one of his parts-and-repairs-stockup trips to town with trees in the back of the pickup Apple trees “You bought WHAT 9 ” I exclaimed Hey, the apple trees had been reduced on sale to 90% off the original price, for goodness sake (Yes, they were still alive) And, shortly before, our West Coast daughter has been reminiscing on the phone one night about how she used to love picking apples off those old trees when she was a kid And how it would be nice for her kids to be able to do that on visits to the farm. We now have a couple of “yearling” apple trees happily thriving in the meadow fence now “The deer will enjoy them,” justified The Farmer of his fruit tree planting, after years of rea soning why planting fruit trees made no economic sense Since deer are still a rare pleasure to watch on our farm, it’s an acceptable excuse And, if our “little dears” enjoy them too, why that’s just an added bonus. .Wound here, when it comes to grandkids and animals, eco nomics and logic go out the win dow NOTICE