Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, August 29, 1958, Image 16

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    16—Lancaster Farming, Friday, August 29, 1958
Kenneth Seibert, Lititz, Is Named
Outstanding FFA Swine Breeder
Kenneth L Seibert, a student
at Warwick Union .High School,
has been named Lancaster Coun
tv’s outstanding Future Farmer
Swine Breeder Kenneth is fif
teen >ears of age and was cited
at the 15th annual Sears Roebuck
Foundation Gilt awards banquet
held at York.
Mark W. Anspach. manager of
the Sears Store at Lancaster,
made the presentations.
The Sears Store promotes in
terest among Future Farmers in
the breeding of purebred swine
Awards are given each year to
the youth who makes the best
record m breeding and raising
the gilts
Seibert and a friend own a
purebied Yorkshire boar. He is
going to raise purebred York
shires after he has finished his
Vocational course at school
Kenneth is the son of Mr and
Mrs William Seibert, RD. 1, Lit
itz, Pa
In addition to receiving the
citation he was given a S5O US.
Bond for leading in Lancaster
County and a $25. U S Bond as
the top breeder in the Warwick
FFA Chapter Robert W Henney
is the Vo-Ag adviser at the War
ruck School.
Guests present included FFA
neinbeis, faculty membeis and
fi lends fiom the area included
Lancaster , York, Adams, and
Franklin Counties
Holstein Steers Fed
Stilbestrol Profitable
A profitable business can re
suit fiom raising Holstein steers
fci beef and adding stilbestrol to
tne feed, according to Gerald
Ward of the Colorado State Um
veisitv experiment station
In an experiment wih 16 Hol
s' em steers, Ward reports that
stilbestrol fed steel s gained 2 4
pounds a day, compared with 2 1
pounds by a control group
The stilbestrol group’s average
return above feed costs was $35 70
a head and $22 91 for the controls
Each group was fed alfalfa hay,
corn silage, and a grain ration at
the rate of 12 pounds a day
Final weights after 278 days show
ed the stilbestrol-fed group made
better over-all gains, even though
the two groups held even for the
first 60 days
Farm Tested...
Farm Proved
THE NEW
Homelite
DIRECT DRIVE CHAIN SAW
||
Hoimd te s new 7 19 d>rert dri/“ chain
saw is helping farmer: tern their wood
lots into money the fast ea.y ,?y Cuts
through 3' rardwood n i secoi ds 13'
softwood in 12 seconds Pel's trees up to
5 feet m diameter Weighs only 19
pounds (less Liar and chum) Straight
blades clunge cut bo/ bru,t cutter at
'acb.nents Tryittoda,'
New 7-MONTH GUARANTEE
SNAVELY’S
FARM SERVICE
New Holland
Other county Future Farmers
won $25. U S. Bonds for leading
their respective chapters in the
swine program Dave Forry wag
top man in the Donegal Chap
ter; James L Nolt won at Man
heim Central, Richard K Lorah
was the winner at Cocalico; Glenn
Book at Lampeter-Strasburg, Har
old W Bitner at Penn-Manor;
and Elmer T. Jackson at Solanco.
M W. Anspach presented $5O.
Bonds to various county winners
as follows L Donald Kmsely
for York County; Quay H. Hart
man for Adams County and Paul
R. Geseil for Franklin County.
Seiber’s gilt farrowed four
boars and six gilts. After the
awards celebration the boys at
tended the York - Binghamton
baseball game
s \V\T
Added Nutritional Strength
— For FUL-O-PEP FEEDS See Your Nearest Dealer
Grubb Supply
Elizabethtown, Pa.
J. C. Walker & Son
Gap, Pa,
Rough & Tumble
Tenth Reunion
Attracts 18.000
An estimated 18,000 persons
attended the three-day Tenth An
nual Reunion of the Rough and
Tumble Historical Engineers As
sociation last week.
During the meeting C Everett
Young," Kinzer, was re-elected
President of the Association
Others elected were A D Mast,
Lancaster, First Vice-President;
M. Abram Trout, Kinzer, Second
Vice-President; Mrs. Jane Y.
Brackbill, Kinzer, Secretary-Treas
ur; Elmer Ritzman, Enola, Chap
lin; Charles Rice, New Holland,
Publicity Director; and Ralph W.
Eby, Solicitor.
Named as Association directors
were Herman Brackbill, Kinzer;
Harvey Hoffman, Rheems, Ralph
Green, Elizabeth, N.J, Joseph
Stoltzfus, Atglen; Paul M. Nolt,
-
% \
IN FUL-O-PEP FEEDS MAKES HENS
LAY TO
H. M. Stauffer & Sons, Inc.
Morgantown Feed & Grain S. H. Hiestand & Co.
Saltmga, Pa.
New Holland; Harry Pierce, Elk
ton, Md.; and C. J. Hochstatler,
Bareville
The machinery on display in
cluded 225 pieces of old-time
steam-driven equipment. Thirty
states and the Countries of Swed
en, Switzerland, and Ireland were
represented Also included in the
activities were daily displays of
threshing, flailing, various con
tests, ladies hobby show, and a
parade.
One of the shows special at
tractions was an Alhs-Chalmers
Corliss Steam Engine with a fly
wheel, weighing 5000 pounds.
Thousands of soft drinks, bot
tles of milk, and other food were
served by members of Kmzers
Fire Company, its auxiliary, and
the Paradise Presbyterian
Church.
The association plans to use
the proceeds from the reunion
toward its new museum. Event
ually the Engineers plan to en
close the Kmzers grounds into
one large museum containing the
many types’ of steam engines.
THE LIMIT!
40 to 60 more eggs per 50 pound bog!
Hens at the Ful-O-Pep Research Farm produced
40 more eggs per 50-Ib. bag on new super Ful-O-
Pep Laying Ration, and 60 more eggs per bag on
new super Ful-O-Pep Laying Mash (fed half
and half with com). That’s an average of one
extra egg per pound of Ful-O-Pep!
3.5 lbs.of Ful-0-Pep produces] dozen eggs!
Tests show that hens fed this new Laying Ration
averaged producing a dozen eggs on less than 3.5
lbs. of feed ... laid 40 more eggs per 50 lbs. of
feed ... ate 60 lbs. less feed per day, per 1000
hens, over the regular laying ration. That’s
super-efficiency!
Yes, Ful-O-Pep offers you high-quality complete
rations high-efficiency mashes to feed with
grain and hi|
ing. And with Ful-O-Pep you get the nutrients
you pay {or . . . you get added nutritional
strength! See your Ful-O-Pep Dealer today.
Leola, Witmer & Ronks, Pa,
Stevens, Pa.
A feed for every need
iotenc
fULQPEp
THE QUAKER OATS COMPANY-CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
-Pep TmJU
Judges Named for
Livestock Show
TIMONIUM, Md. Seven top
livestock experts today were
named as judges for the twelfth
annual Eastern National Live
stock Show to be held at the
Maryland State Fair Grounds No
vember 15-20
T Alex Edwards, Ontario, Can
ada. will judge the Aberdeen-
Angus breeding cattle. Roy R,
Largent, of Merkel, Tex., will
judge iHerefords, and Homer
Clausen, of Spencer, lowa, will
judge Shorthorns. Judging Poll
ed Herefords will be Glen Brat
cher, Oklahoma State University.
Don L. Good, Kansas State Col
lege, will award blue ribbons to
pme-winmng fat cattle. Dwight
E Younkin, livestock extension
specialist at Pennsylvania State
University, will judge swine, and
G. A Allen, Jr, Virginia Poly
technic Institute, will judge
sheep.
concentrates for mix-
D. W. Hoover
East Earl, R. D. 1, Pa-