Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, June 25, 1966, Image 16

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

    —Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 25, 1966
16
Pelleting Means
More Hog Per
Ton Of Feed
Pelleted feed for hogs is
some 10 r r more efficient than
meal rations when pigs ai.i
fed corn-soybean feed, reports
a research nutritionist current
ly working on problems of
swine nutrition.
Pelleting thus saves the hog
producer at least $7 per ton
of feed, it was calculated by
Dr D. E. Becker of the Uni
versity of Illinois. Writing in
the spring issue of The Merck
Agricultural Memo, Becker es
timated that pelleted rations
mean at least 60 pounds more
gain per ton of feed.
•‘At piesent, 60 pounds of
live hog is worth at least Sl2,
whereas the cost for pelleting
will not exceed $5 per ton of
feed.” he said “Hence, theie
can be no doubt that pellet
ing is an economic pi actice ’
Conti aiy to -eailiei assump
tions, Beckei found that the
beneficial effect of the pellet
ed feed is not a consecmenoe
of greatei feed intake Pellet
fed pigs “actually consumed
less feed daily than meal fed
pigs ’ he said, though weight
gains weie moie lapid
Whv this should be so is
still somewhat of a mvsten
Beckei declaied Fonn of thci
Farmers 7 Assn. Ladies
Schedule Summer Plans
The Ladies Committee oi
the Lancaster Coenty Faim
eis’ Association met on Tues
day evening at the home of
Mi's Ellis Mentzei to plan
then summer activities and
budget
• Ladies Da> Out ’ will be
held at the Abbeyville Inn at
Collegeville on Friday, July 29
A smoigasboid dinnei and in
loimative piogiam is planned
The annual picnic foi all
Lancastei County Faimeis’i
Association membeis will be
held at Sico Paik Mount Joy
with a picnic suppei, games
and fellowship Theie will not
be a speakei
Plans weie also made for i
luncheon meeting with the
Ameucan Association of Um
veisity Women This will be
held at the Gioflf home at
Mount Joy Date to be an
nounced latei
• Have You Heard?
(■Continued fioin Page 11)
Chunk-style tuna comes in
bite-sized pieces suitable toi
use in casseioles, ci earned
dishes, oi salads
Flaked 01 grated tuna con
sists of small bits icady foi
blending to make sandwich
fillings dips, 01 salads
Albacoie, a vanety of tuna
is the only kmc! that can he
labeled a» while meat Othei
tuna caneties aie designated
as light meat
Stoilug Place Mats
ami Napkins
laige poi tioho-lvpe caid
boaici contameis you can
make 01 bn l ' is handy toi stoi
m? place mats and napkins
When expanded, the poitlolio
is 1 1 1 inches deep and can
hold mote than a do/en items
When shut, it can be stoi ■>rl
in a diawei oi on a shell to
piolect linens tioin wi inkling
oi soiling Lc.bel the outside
with the contents
Is That Woul Necessary?
The Ten Commandments con
tain 297 woids the Bill ot
Rights 463 Lincoln’s Gettys
bmg Acldiess 266 A iceent
ledeial ducctive to legulate
the puce of cabbage contains
pellet appears to have little
significance, since “pigs fed
nuiit,l''d feeds reground into
a meal exhibit the beneficial
effect.” He noted findings by
other researchers that pellet
ing increases the digestibility
coefficient of dry matter and
gross energy, but not of crude
protein.
“It seems likely that pellet
machines cause some chemi
cal or physical change that
enables the pig to digest the
diet more completely,” the nu
tritionist speculated. “Based on
our knowledge of the effect
of heat on the nutritive value
of corn, it does not seem
likely that the heat of pellet
ing along is responsible for
the improvement of utiliza
tion ”
14 TEST COW FEED
This feed has a course granular texture. It's ideal as an all
purpose herd feed to be fed as it comes from the bag to
milking cows, dry cows, calves, and bulls Remember, it is
EXCELLENT FOR FEEDING DURING WARM PERIODS.
Try Red Rose 14 Test-Cow Feed . . . and you'll use ft’ always
NEED A GOOD SILAGE PRESERVATIVE? Lancaster Sweet
Mix furnishes molasses in a dry, convenient form for mak
mg grass silage It can be fed directly into the cutter or
blower as the silage crop is put in the silo Try it!
Wolter Binkley & Son
Lititz
Brown & Rea
Atglen
Elverson Supply Co.
Klvei son
L, T. Geib Estate
Manheim
I. B, Graybill & Son
Refton Strasburg
E. M. Heisey
A ratio ViolrU I Trfc m « tter In the soil, the depart
* ICIUS Up ment of horticulture research
-25% When Mulch ' r w ‘£ ,s
Roitlorott (sArl are used, Ritter explains,
JACpmv-CS OUU a build-up of nitrogen, phos-
Yields from semi-dwarf ap- P ho ™ B ’ P° tassium - and boron
pie trees can be increased 25 sta *?. a - y ear or , a£t * r
to 30 percent per tree by ap- P lu c t un S- mulch should
plying mulch instead of grow- he renewed annually about
ing sod near the base of the the first of July, he suggests,
trees, according to eight years , Yiel f s fro . m Nathan apple
of experiments at Penn State increased as much
University as 50 P° unds P er tree when
mulch is used instead of sod
In 1964,65, average yields of for ground cover, he said,
eight-year old Golden Delicious Mulched eight-year old Mcln
trees were increased by 115 tosh trees have yielded 45
pounds per tree by using more pounds per tree than
mulch instead of sod, says the trees grown under sod
Marshall Ritter, of the Agri- culture. The experiments were
cultural Experiment Station at carried out in the University
Penn State The mulch con- orchards.
serves moisture, keeps down Carl g Bm extension
weeds, and maintains organic fruit spec iali S t at Penn State,
Rbo^^Rose
See These Dealers For
Mt Joy
Heisfond Bros.
' Elizabethtown
A. L. Herr & Bro.
Quarryville
David B. Harsh
Bowmansville
Mountville Feed Service
Mountville
Musser Forms, Inc.
Columbia
Musser's Mill
The Buck
Here is the feed
you need
for your herd!
Today’s dairy farmers need a high
energy feed vitamin-fortified and
palatable to maintain the herd,
encourage maximum milk produc
tion, help produce calves, and be
adaptable to milk parlor feeding.
Yet, this feed must be free-flowing
and easily handled . . . and return a
good profit
RED ROSE 14 TEST-COW FEED is
that kind of dairy feed. It’s made of
high quality grains and proteins,
high in fat, minerals, apd digestible
nutrients. Test-Cow Feed is very
palatable, can be fed at all seasons,
and is an excellent feed to keep
appetites from lagging during warm
days of summer
Your
Feeds
Chas. E.
Terre Hill
Ammon E. Shelly
Litilz
L. M. Snavely
Litit?
E. P. Spotts, Inc.
Honey Biook
H. M. Stauffer & Sons,
says that growers gen*
erally have. frame acreage of
waste land or -wet areas un
suited ‘for fruit growing but
Ideal for growing mulch. In
wet areas, Reed canarygrass
grows well, he reports. In the
better drained areas, orchard
grass, brotnegrass, or sudan
grass may be grown. Provi
sions must be made for mouse
control, Bittner advises.
Ritter finds that the mulch
ed trees produce apples with
brighter color than trees
grown with a sod culture. Al
so, the apples are firmer and
sweeter, he adds.
Livestock products furnish
about 60 percent of the pro
tein in the U. S. food supply,
states the Nutrition Research
Department of the National
Live Stock and Meat Board.
Sauder & Sons
Inc.
Witmer