ti swMusbU utaafo (kirn Populations Must Be High Don’t Jet low corn plant popu lation rob you of corn, warns As sociate County Agent Joseph H. Way of Chester County. Re search work conducted by the Agronomy Department, of the Pennsylvania State University,'in dicates that best corn yields are obtained when the plant popula tion at husking time is 14,000 to 18,000 plants per acre. Lick Mastitis These SURE Ways! ROCKLAND'S PENTACIN DISPOSABLE Plus otnsr potent antibiotics Available in 7Vi gram tubes. For Twite the Power —Twice the''Strength SUPER PENT-A-CIN INJECTOR And For MuH»ple*D«se PENT-A-CIN in THE DIAL-A- SHOTS with REAL CONVENING At all dealers 1 ROCKLAND C CHEMICAL CO. WEST CALDWELL, N.V One-half block from Penn Square on South Queen Street.—Rear of Main-Bank. “Serving Lancaster from Center Square since 1S89” . MILLERSVILLE. BRANCH Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Maximum Insurance $lO,OOO per depositor Roughagd to Holding s*' 5 *' Beef Breeding Herd in Winter Cattlemen build the winter feeding program for the beef breeding herd around the rough age supply with emphasis on economy according to Joseph H. Way, associate agent in Chester County. The expense of wintering cattle should be no greater than the minimum needed to insure a reasonable degree of comfort and to keep them vigorous and healthy. In herds of average size it will pay, Ways says, to keep dry cows separate from cows nursing calves Cows nursing calves re- Hw'j f EGG SIZE?! You can stop worrying about egg prices when your houses are full of Mount' Hope pullets. The combination of Big Eggs and man/ of them means top income for you. , Mount Hope leghorns are noted for I large eggs, excellent interior egg j ft quality, and good feed conversion. 1 L You'll say: "Since changing to i M Mount Hope Leghorns, I've M never had it so good." M Get al) the facts about JM "Built-in Profits" in Jfj/Jrh ■nk. our new| Folder yjyj ■ * MOUNT HOPE LANCASTER COUNTY’S ONLY FRANCHISED MOUNT HOPE HATCHERY REAL ECONOMY Johnson’s Hatchery EPHRATA, PA. PHONE RE3-2980 . 302 N. GEORGE ST, quire half again as much feed as dry cows. For this reason calves dropped in the spring usually are raised much cheaper than calves diopped late in the year. The dry beef cow in average flesh needs about two per cent of her hve weight in diy roughage oi average quality per day 200 pounds for a cow weighing 100 pounds. Thiee to three and one half pounds of silage, depending upon the moisture content, will equal one pound ot hay in feed ing value. Five or six pounds of good leafy legume hay a day will sup ply ample protein for a dry cow. Unless the supply of good' hay is plentiful, some filler such as corn stover, oat straw, or some other low grade roughage can be fed free-choice to satisty the appetite and meet the energy require ments. Feed cows nursing calves four to six pounds ot gram daily. If an abundant supply of corn silage is available, grain feeding of nurs ing cows is seldom necessary. Feed heifer calves and year lings separately trom the brood cows, Way adds, for while dry cows can be wintered on rough age alone, heifers raised for re placements need quality rough ago and three or four pounds of gram daily to insure good growth Fresh water, minerals, and salt are just as important during the winter as any other season Research Man Stresses Quality, Management •The year round demand for a supply of high quality eggs has caused growers to start chicks the year round, said Dr. L A. Wil helm, director of research for the Ful-O-Pep experimental farm at Libertyville, 111, at a meeting held Tuesday at the Lancaster Poultry Center Dr Wilhelm also noted that layer numbers are down about three per cent, but added that this meant little because average production per hen has. been in creased by about the same amount. “In poultry production,” Dr. Wilhelm said, “good* management is the one thing that the poultry man can control. Prices, feed cost and cost of chicks are beyond his control, but good management and attention to detail is one thing that he can control and this often is the margin between profit and loss ” A new recommendation on starting chicks made by Dr. Wil helm was to start the young birds on mash, rather than cracked corn as has been done. “Cracked corn starting,” he' said, “was done because of the di gestive upsets and “sticking up” caused by Pullorum.” He said that with Pullorum free chicks and the availability of antibiotic feeds, there is ho need for cracked, corn starting. He also feels that all mash feeding is the coming thing for both chickens and livestock. He said that good results have been had with swine fed an all mash ration at the experimental farm ■ The meeting was sponsored by Lancaster and Chester County Ful-O-Pep dealers Dairy Cow Clipping In Winter Profitable Winter clipping of dairy cows reduce the amount of labor neces sary to care for - the animals, makes it easier to prepare cows for milking, helps control cattle lice and improves appearance of the herd. Clipping is required by most milk sheds to lower the bacteria count of the milk. In clipping cows, start with the tail and tailhead, then clip the udder, belly, hocks, and finally the flanks If lice control is a problem, clip along the backbone Clipping helps fit animals for shows and enables dairymen to present- cattle to advantage to prospective buyers. Hosarians to Go To Flower Show Mrs. Mary W Sheaffer, 434 South Market St., Elizabethtown, is chartering a bus to attend the Philadelphia Flower Show on Tuesday, March 26. Reservation should be made early by calling Mrs. Shaeffer. The Elizabethtown Rose So ciety met Jan. 24 in the Educa tional Room of the Bank building in Elizabethtown. Notes from the meeting included a notice to all losarians, friends and new mem bers to plan their gardens now and order early from their rose catalogues. Also, a suggestion for a Valen tine gift, the Rose “Love Song” was given. The next meeting of the so ciety will be held Feb. 28, with Mrs. Fred Glaes of the Reading Rose Society as guest speaker NEW BE-CQ-NURSE starts calves right... It’s BEACON-TROLLED / / . ** * > ■fr v ■> f *< - ii •*. | > M ** ~ ' r * , r» ""V * > V X s'* < s -# A < K< Here’s a brand-new, low-cost beacon milk replacer to grow the kind of herd replacements you lairymen want. Be-Co-Nurse is a practical formulation 1. Be-Co-Nurse is more than. 35% Glairy .products with 3 ample amounts of Dried Skim Milk, Dried Buttermilk „ I and Sweet Dried Whey as of protein. c 2. ~Be-Co-Nurse iq economical. One 25-pound bag re places 250 pounds of whole milk... reliquefies for four cents a quart or $1.90/CWT. 3. Growth and Anti-Scour Factors are added in ade quate amounts... aureomycin, Vitamins A, B com *plex, and D, plus trace minerals. 4. Easy to feed. Just add Be-Co-Nurse to warm water.' Stays in suspension so the calf gets it all. 5. High in Energy. 10% stabilized animal fat gives an abundance of energy for rapid growth ©ET YOUR FREE SAMPLE ... of thi* fine, new Beacon product. See how it etaye in suspension and the way calve* take to Be-Co-Nurse. For your free wimple aend a postcard to your' nearest Beacon ad dress below, c/o Department L - 2 - 33 -jf BEACON BITTER BECAUSE THEY’RE BEACOW-TROU.ER Curing IVUnultctur* Att»r M«nuf»Ctur« I> Itm MwirowMV ■•for* Manufsctur* Farmers Supply Co. 137-39 E. KING ST, LANCASTER ' Paul H. Gehman . DENVER Fred L. and John E. Homsher STRASBURG AND - QUARRYVILLE 0. Kenneth McCracken MANHEIM Cliester-Delaware Fruit Growers Meeting To Be Held Feb. 7 ~~ Spray programs for 1957 will be the mam topic of a meeting of the Chester-Delaware Fruit Glowers meeting to be held at (he Municipal Building in West phester, Feb. 7 v Speakers will be Dr O D. Burks, extension plant patholo gist, and Dr. Henry Nenusan, Jr, extension entomologist The morning progiara will in clude the association meeting at 10 and a discussion of the spray program tor cheenes, pears and other minor fruits at 11. The 1957 spray program for ap ples and peaches will be discus sed in the afternoon session start ing at 1 30. The 1957 spray schedules will be distributed at the meeting / ~ 4 ’ ■ ' :^K4 - < * ,*» Vi 'S -.v * - '• \ < , / 1 > < V i i I t~ ■> i , * * designed to give calves a head stjirt toward good milk profits. It’s a Bea con-trolled product... built to grow real producers for your milking string. Millport Roller Mills 1 Ij * # I Osceola Flour Mills t Wenger’s Feed Mill, “ RHEEMS J. M. Bomberger 1 ELM \ * f * FEEDS LITITZ Earl Sauder NEW HOLLAND GORDONVILLE Inc.