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Show k7 flf! ISS" AT 15 O A 15-year-old farm boy of Canandaigua, New York, is proving to his neighbors that the future of American agriculture is in safe hands. When his father died suddenly less than two years ago, young Dewitt E. Van tloy, then only 13, shouldered the job of running the family 65-acre 65-acre farm and somehow finding time to keep up in his school work. With the encouragement and help of his mother he is building build-ing up the farm and installing install-ing new labor-saving electrical elec-trical equipment. He won New York state honors in the Westinghouse-spon-sored 4-H farm and home electric program. At left he works on an electric fence. ; I ; .. v - " : . . v 1 ' . i i . : , i vf ' ' t,V ffC( ', I " - - : - oi . S i 1 i 1 "3 . ' .-I f v,t - j K x , - , 1 1 , f t - 4 ' l. ' ' " ' ' ' ' " ' i " ' i S - ' i S " ' s V , 4 " ' - - s : n , J r' i. " f i 5 ; i 4 , , I, ' , - v I f x : . . , , . ' ' ' v 1 v - J r tv? -yoy jy . ! s f I "v - i ".T'y- v.! -' -ilry-:. t -:v - ry yY' s-i- . i y ' V- ' ' -':y- v 1 O As his reward in the electrical equipment equip-ment program, Dewitt received an all-expense trip to Chicago where he attended the recent 4-H club contest along with 39 other state winners. In high school, he studies a wide variety of subjects. Above, with industrial arts instructor Floyd D. Butler, But-ler, he works on a "return call" wiring hookup hook-up which is complete with battery and doorbells. Y A i f - , 's ' '. J N - vJ A" 1 ; 'y "v r - y $ v , 'x , i ,y1yr" V;' &y cvNw I i f " Li ' i t ? ' t'T I tr , I In Dewitt's farm electric program are many labor saving devices. He can complete the milking chore in about half an hour using the electric milking machine above. His chief hope for the farm's future is the dairy herd. At present he has seven cows producing. At left the youth gathers eggs which are sold to a local sanitarium as well as to neighbors. The flock numbers 41 hens. 9 After dinner, darkness outside doesn't end the work day. As if school didn't require homework, Dewitt sometimes helps his mother wrestle with the farm's necessary bookkeeping. book-keeping. Most of this job, of course, is handled by Mrs. Van Noy who was elected town clerk this year. In this position she issues licenses to hunt, fish and get married, files mortgages, acts as secretary secre-tary of the town beard and receives a modest salary for same which helps to nake ends meet. i , -- . . - ' i y v .;y-.y t . r, - v - f J- 11 -A yj . ...."-'-"V -;f I s r .. j - y - . y.y |