6—Lancaster Farming, Friday, March 22, 1957 FARMERS SUPPLY THt PROVED WAt op growing ugoer- »*t«* TOBACCO PIAHTS first tried 1 M W tmisisl **! I vIgOKO now £ I {£«P'*»“"* b bK ««* system* • • ** .plant. Fine, easier they ***“ j_ c a long big-tooted pUnts s \ toward makiog 100 lbs. DRIED BLOOD CERTIFIED TOBACCO SEED Tobacco Muslin 2 or 3 yd. widths with brass eyelets * BRIMM * FOR POTATOES VEGETABLES CORN Brimm is a specialized crop maker offered particularly (or truck crops in this area It is made specifi cally (or your soil It is formu lated so that the combination o( your soil and the recommended application o( Brimm will pro vide the crop with all o( the nutrients required (tom soil (or the best results. PASTURGRO FERTILIZER FOR ALFALFA FIELDS OR PASTURE Futurgro, Swift’s premium paa tare plant food, is specially formu lated for grasses and legumes. This specialized pasture/maker is more than ordinary plant food. It contains extra growth elements that produce mineral-rich forage more meat or milk per acre. Vonr pasture or hay land, plus Pasture© gives von a complete combination of growth factors for fast-growing nutritions high-pro tein grass Put on '’asturgro this spring stref">> your grazing sea son at both ends. FARMERS SUPPLY CO. 137 E. KING ST. Egg Month Bringing Record Returns: PENB ST. CHARLES, 111. Midway n March Egg Month the flood gates of publicity on eggs were being kept wide open in the 48 .tates and thousands of sales messages about eggs were filling :onsumer channels to record levels, the Poultry and Egg Na tional Board reports. The' number of consumer-publi ity cooperators in March Egg lonth continues to grow. Here me a few that are doing an out jtanding job in publicizing PENB gg recipes or other egg mess iges nationally this month. Magazines Family Weekly, irculation over 4 million, 2-page olor spread in March 3 issue, 'arade, circ. 7 million, Salzburg er Nockerln'egg feature. Seven teen, circ. 1-million, egg break ’ast feature. Everywoman’s, arc. I million, editorial feature. Newspaper Syndicates King features, circ. 10 million, Danish Cgg Casserole, General Features, ■ire. 3 million, Checkered Egg '.andwich. Newspaper Enterprises associates, 75 0 newspapers, ‘Cackleburgs.” Internalxonal \ T ews Service, 800 newspapers, Shamrock Egg Salad. Christian Science Monitor, Smoked Eggs. Some other notable cooperators are Cooperative G. L. F. Ex change, Inc., 50,000 promotion and advertising effort for poul try, and eggs in New Tork State in March, Columbia Broadcasting System, the Garry Moor? TV Show; National Association of Food Chains, Washington", D. C.; Conrad Hilton and Sheraton ho tels, featuring eggs on menus; De Kalb Agricultural Association, radio sales messages on eggs over 400 stations; Allied Mills, Inc., two PENB broadcasts on Egg Month to five million American farmers; U. S. Department of Agriculture, nationwide publicity and promotion; Armour & Co.; First National Stores; McCrory Stores; American Stores; Federat ed Egg and Poultry Sales, Inc. (Cleveland) to mention a few. Five separate PENB recipe photo releases featuring eggs are appearing in March issues of large newspapers across the na tion. They were mailed to five lists totaling 300 newspapers. They feature such subjects as “Full Meal Egg Sandwich,” “Colonial Potato Salad,” and egg rich cakes, custards and cream puffs. $4.85 TV food program directors and radio food editors all over Am erica have been using PENS re cipe-photo material featuring Stuffed Eggs Delmonico. Radio farm directors in all the states also have been cooperating in spotting PENB news briefs on eggs. There has been tremendous co operation from state PENB com mittees in getting eggs publicized by means of material furnished by PENB and by special creative effort of their own. Governors, mayors and other dignitaries have cooperated with the industry on a grand scale. The state groups have held numerous egg break fasts and, luncheons. PENB staff members have been appearing on TV and radio pro grams from coast to coast. Concentrate Rations Fed Cows Sets Record The March 12 issue of the Milk Production report by the Crop Reporting Board contains a special 12-page section on con centrate rations fed to milk cows in 1956. Amount of these fed to cows on farms last year averaged 1,825 pounds, almost four per cent above the previous high re cord of 1,758 pounds set in 1955. About half the grain and con centrates were home grown by dairymen who fed them. Average value per 100 pounds was $3, the lowest since 1945. - *1 * r< W s..'ys\ t*>*v> A TWO STORY extension was decided best when B. Snavely Garber, R 2 Willow Street, decided to remodel his milking bam. At a meeting of dairy producers at the Garber farm Tuesday, the extension was called “very practical” by John Walker, Penn State agricultural engineer. Inside, it fea tures a single circuit feeding arrangement It's On The Way! ifMI B D-14 All MmMM ® speeds ahead " Quick-shift to high or low range |l ))M Constant speed live PTO ' Continuous operating hydraulic pump POWER CRATER Engino Full 3-Plow Power Rang e Selector for TRACTION BOOSTER system a The original Rower-Shift rear wheels A||» SNAP - COUPLER hitch Choice of front-end styles, power steering if you wont it. USTiN TO the National Farm and Home Hour every Saturday on NBC Po«m CaATsu, Traction Bomtui •lid SNAT-CoiirLTß OF* Aliii'CliilßUi tndißuki* R. S. Weaver Mann & Gmmelli Farm Serv. Stevens. Pa. V. G. Myers & Son LH. Brubaker Snavelys Farm Service Eheems. Pa. ■ V" * < * .* 1 J % r with LOW-LINE, HIGH-CROP design Excluslv POWER DIRECTOR Center-ride seat. Rail-shift front axle, all-enclosed hydraulic system. Low-line for step-aboord> convenience, High clearance to Joy by crops ALLIS-CHALMERS Lancaster. Pa. ■,WJ' Ns ' - - ** * 5 *' * * %< *~y