PREP ARE SPRAYERS State University. Replace inter may not be ,too late I™'**' b T oken I , or <*m **e remind extension agrl- steel J)arts available, tnrsl engineers at Penn " w -FARMERS GROW SWEET CORN CASH CROP HARVESTING AND HAULING AVAILABLE JOHN F. COPE CO., BNC. Manheim, Pa. Office Phone 898-2206 Field Representatives JOHN L. BARE 898-7010 Lane. Please Phone Evenings (Mre-mie R • *v. J.* < * 5 „ ' s ✓ i Ac. |t> < , - f Cf*%, - i* '-tv? '•* Vx. ' s* ' V # *Vrt-V4« CAS* c* I ; Hk mßf $ * m' Falk mk -■ & y* There are plenty of good reasons why Chore-Matic is America’s top poultry feeding system (ask your neighbor, he probably has one>. Any place in the house every bird has a complete, fresh, clean feed ration that’s not picked over. Waste and contamination are virtually eliminated. Chore-Matic gives 30% more feeding space over trough type feeders. Entire line raises and lowers easily for fast floor'cleaning. Auger gently moves feed to pans l , doesn’t grind or separate feed. And the versatile Chore-Matic system provides completely automated feeding for any size poultry house. Sure it’s mimjser-one. Always has been, alway% will be. But then it should. Chore-Matic is, the original auger type feedjng system, BET tJELIVERY FROM . A WAREHOUSE NEAR YOUl' I** * ’ ' " ~ AS A BILL WINGENROTH 626-5403 Lititz < K' ?. ■< .. f -a 5 * ' r ?♦ ' A ' aim <’ •< r ‘ . ■> «■%* * b‘Jr/s* ~ : r > mm i *Sft v j(3r s£<■ aRU&WeSSrwt-^) HALFWAY TO MARKET are these 100-pound porkers being raised as an. FFA swine fattening project by Robert Weaver. He got started with swine when he was awarded the Sears’ gilt several years ago. L. F. Photo v \ > o % y fA SS ■■ +V 'V / N * < 365 LIBERTY STREET, EAST J P. O. Box 1233, Lancaster, Pennsylvania Anderson Box Co. PO. Box 31157 Indianapolis, Ind. □ Send literature □ Have salesman call Address. City. .Phone 717-394-9204 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February-19, 1966—7 Chore-Matio 665 .State. • Robert Weaver (Continued from Page 1) include such sports as base ball and basketball. Locally, he has participated in tele- Msi'on programs which his chapiter has piesented in the Lancaster area. He traveled to Kansas City last Fall with, several chapter-mates and their instructor to attend the National FFA Convention. During State FFA Week last summer at Penn State he achieved honorable mention in the Farm Mechanics con test. At the last annual meeting of the Inter-State Milk Producers’ Cooperative in Philadelphia, he represent ed the Garden Spot Chapter, In addition to all of these and county chapter ac tivities, he raises two acres of corn and one acre oof to bacco, caies foi a dairy heif ei and a pen of fattening pigs These are the projects he carnes as part of the vo cational agriculture work penence piogram. Bob, a quiet, but intense, soit ot boy, appeals to use his available time to best ad \ antage. Theie isn’t mu'ch. wasted motion in what he does, and appaiently his fel low FFA menvbeis recogniz ed this efficient qu'ality when they chose him to lead the cou'nty chapter tin's year. • Pesticide Research (Continued from Page 1) tiom the Agucultural Exten sion Seivice and the Penn sylvania Department of Agri cultm e The stepped-up i esearclx progiam will answer some ot the Questions regaiding the ielation of pesticides to plant and animal ecology and human health Frear points out that-lesearch in the pes. ticide field is a highly spe. claimed subject loqmnng laige investments in equip ment and manpower At the time chemical re search on pesticides was be gun at Penn State in 19 33, less than a dozen insecticides iwere in common use, and about half that .number of fungicides Today, hundreds ot chemicals are used to con trol algae, birds, trees, snails, and rabbits to men tion a tew. Most of today’s ■chemicals are organic com pounds, some of a highly complex nature, according t* Frear. Interest- tn cooperative work is already indicated by facul. ty memibers in fields o£ agronomy, animal science, pla-nt pathology,.and forestry *