The Rural Voice, 1979-09, Page 6Emma Franken and children
BY LISE GUNBY
"Now," said Emma Franken, "we
often say—how did we ever do it?"
It's a natural question to ask of a woman
who has managed for the last seven years,
to raise nine children and manage a dairy
farm successfully.
When her husband, John, died suddenly
in 1972, their youngest child was a year
and a half old, the oldest sixteen. They had
been planning to enlarge the farm and milk
50 or 60 cows.
"Wc 11 do well if we can keep up what
we do now," she told herself at the time.
But in seven years, the Franken family
has added a silo, a lean-to, a milkhouse and
granary to the property. They milk 30 cattle
and have sows as well, which they went
into three years ago. They have 150 acres,
and rent another 50.
Harry is the oldest, 23 now. He helped
out on the farm , taking his high school
classes part time. He is now farming and
rents land near Teeswater, with beef,
Holsteins, hogs and cash crops.
Margaret is now 22, and soon to be
married. She recently graduated as a
nurse. "Margaret hauled manure the first
summer because Harry missed so much
school." said Mrs. Franken.
Eddie, 20, and John, 19, are now
farming on the next sideroad to the
Franken farm. They rent the land, have 90
cattle and 100 sows.
"The kids would be lost in town," said
Mrs. Franken, "they would have to find
jobs...1 sometimes think I have troubles
now, but if I had all those kids in town I'd
really have troubles."
Paul, 18, has been working on the farm
since last November. He worked in a
factory for a while after he left school, said
his mother, but found it "awful." Paul has
15 cattle of his own, and puts the money he
earns from farm work back into the
animals. He also owns half of the sows, she
said, because he is working at home with
her.
Mike is 16, Tom is 15 and David is 11.
Tom works for his two older brothers,
Eddie and John, when he is off from school
in the summer. "David and Mike help in a
big way " at nome, saiu Mrs. Franken.
"They all help."
Mary Anne is the youngest and helps out
in the house and the barn.
"They're all pretty good workers, every
one of them," Mrs. Franken said, "That
doesn't mean I never complain—to them.
But I give them a pat on the back when
they do well."
Each of the brothers and sisters are
given their own heifer when they turn 10
years old.
"I don't mind feeding a few cattle for
them," she said.
The first complaint heard from farmers
is that their children aren't interested in
farming, she said. But the young Frankens
are interested and if there's a job to be
done, they go and do it.
Emma Franken
"I really have no explanation for it,"
said Mrs. Franken, "unless it's because
we give them a calf or something of their
own." They also get a pig of their own each
year.
She said she keeps an eye on where their
proceeds go—it's theirs to spend, but she
doesn't want them t • thrnw it away_
They take turns on the tractor when
ploughing or planting, eating in shifts.
"That machine never really sits still,"
Mrs. Franken said, "My neighbour figures
I run a restaurant service, because there's
food on the table all day long."
The Frankens have a healthy garden.
The kids help with the tilling while Mrs.
Franken does the hoeing. "1 really like
working in the garden," she said, "You
get time to think about things—it's
relaxing."
Mrs. Franken had no experience with
farm life until she married. "I knew which
end you milked the cow on, but that was
about the end of my knowledge," she
laughed.
"I'm not saying that everything got done
perfectly in the first few years," she said,
"I mean, you have to set your priorities.
But lately, it's getting to be pretty good."
Mrs. Franken is also the president of the
Catholic Women's League in St. Augustine
and is involved with the St. Joseph's
Community School Association in Kings-
bridge, a group working towards making
use of the school year-round, rather than
just during the school year. They are now
raising money for playground equipment.
Paul, Mike, and Tom belong to the 4-H
Calf and Horse Clubs, and John finished
his eighteenth project last year.
Last year, the family hosted the Twilight
Dairy Show, and had 150 visitors. "We
really enjoyed it," she said, "The kids did
a lot of work for it...to get everything
spruced up."
They've even been able to get away for
holidays in the last few years, to a 4-H fair
on the Southern Ohio and Indiana border.
The whole county gets together to show
their animals and enjoy the entertainment,
and live at the fairgrounds for a week.
The Frankens also show their cattle
locally, and last year had the Junior
Champion in Huron County.
Theirs is a story of success. Perhaps they
will now have time to sit back and enjoy it,
for a fewminutes at least!
"I think," said Mrs. Franken, "that
things are finally on the up and up."
Family Corporation
--Scott Farms Ltd.
BY LISE GUNBY
In 1913, James Scott purchased 59 acres
of farmland on the northwest border of
Seaforth in McKillop township. In 1923,
Mr. Scott went into poultry. His first
hatchery was in the back kitchen of an old
house.
In 1960, the farm became a corporation.
James Scott's son, Bill, was named
vice-president.
Today, Scott's Poultry Farms is a
four -farm complex with a total of 412 acres.
PG. 4 THE RURAL VOICE/SEPTEMBER 1979
'fhe farms employ six tull-time staff.
Eggs are hatched in rows of trays
closeted behind heavy metal doors in
walk-in incubators. Each week, 26,000
chicks go through the hatchery. Prevent-
ative medicine in the form of innoculation
of the chicks can be carried out at the rate
of 7,000 per hour with a machine.
Every year, three million eggs are
produced. The Scott's have approximately
13,500 layers and 16,000 starter pullets.