Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, August 13, 1966, Image 18

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    13 —Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 13, 1966
Th* Jamtiway Vdunwtle diitrifcutM *vtnly (ram t*|» I* N* ft* J «tytrttl»n>
BIG J DISTRIBUTOR/UNLOADER
distributes feed uniformly—
gives you 20% more capacity
Two machine* In will The Blf j workr In any season • as
a silace distributor, as a silo-unloader. At fillfrtf time, tha
Fill-Q»Matic distributor revolves to direct feed to the wall
of the silo - cob. corn, stalk, trass and leaf particles stay
mixed evenly for ideal compaction, fermentation and pres*
ervation. No uneven, off-center loading which causes dan*
terous pressures atainst silo wall. Ends hand labor in tha
silo*because the Bit I is completely mechanical!
Positive delivery un loader! The Bit J unloads evenly, too,
with Power Circle Drive and 3-Point Suspension. You can
remove fluffy, newly cut haylaje Immediately - no waitint
for feed'to settle;
W\ LANDIS BROTHERS, INC.
| J 1305 Manheim Pike, Lancaster, Pa.
L. • Phone 393-3906
Reduce Crop Losses!
Feeders, Dairymen! Sealed
L Storage Can Help You Do HI
Don’t let hot, dry weather cut you completely out of your corn crop
\ profits! Ah investment in Butler sealed* storage can save the day!
4
If you normally expect a yield 1 of 100 bushels per acre—and dry
i weather cuts this yield in half—your 50-bushel crop, cut as silage
and stored in a Butler Stor-N-Feed unit, will produce as many pounds
i of beef or pounds of milk as your 100-bushel yield, when harvested
as.grtin. lt also will pay you to investigate late-forage crops such
* as sudati hybrids. Put up as low moisture silage, the nutrient yield
s ptf acre is- very- attractive.
See us today for details on a proven Butler Stor-N-Feed systcm...
' big capacities, fast discharge rate, mechanically reliable -and
priced thousands of dollars less thai some systems. Lcw-cost
il financing readily available!
ADDISON H. MARTIN, INC.
Builders of Farm Systems
D. 2, Ephrata
BUTLER
PortabU PMfrieid*
D«t«etion Lob. To
Bo Dovolopod
A portable laboratory for
rapidly detecting possible pes
ticide residues on food and
animal" feed before they enter
marketing channels will be de
veloped by F & M Scientific
Division, Hewlett-Packard Cor
poration, Avondale, Pa., under
a two-year $31,630 contract
awarded by the U. S. Depart
ment of Agriculture.
USDA’s Agricultural Re
search Service wHI supervise
these studies on a rapid de
tection system. Portable equip
ment and faster techniques
may permit oommodities to be
tested without lengthy labora
tory analysis. Such a system
would be useful" to USDA com
modity inspectors as well as
other government agencies
and food industries.
» Kirkwood Feed & Groin
' Kirkwood
&\\\Vv\\\\vv
717-354-5374
Now Is The Time...
Te Seed Cresses And Legumes
ALFALFA
CAYUGA Wilt Resistant
' Long Lived
VERNAL Winter Hardy
DUPUITS gelding
Short Lived I ~
BOOKING TIMOTHY SEED NOW
Ask For Agway's Complete Crop Planning Service
11, j<
(%|]Agway Inc.
Lancaster New Holland Quarryville Honey Brook
Now, 10% More Milk
Dairymen everywhere are talking about Ful-O-Pep Gattle-izer Dairy
Feed—the biggest breakthrough in dairy cattle nutrition in this century.
In herd after herd, the story is the same: more milk on thentame amount
of feed.
Based on an entirely new principle in ruminant nutrition, Fuh€£Pep
Cattle-izer Dairy produces up to 20% more usable energythamregullif
Super Milking Feed. And records show, this extra energy, resnltsvhr aft
average of 10% more milk after only 4 weeks on feedi
What would 10% more i»iH mean for yourprofita?
FiH-O-Pep Dairy Feed
(Complete or Concentrate)
H. M. Stauffer & Sons, Inc.
Witmer
Stevens Feed Mill, Inc.
Stevens, Fenna.
The contractor will-develop
a aample analysis system con
taining (1) battery-operated
electronic instruments, ,(2) a
portable gas chromatograph,
(3) 'inexpensive and dispos
able supplies for preparing
samples, (4) an operation -man
ual for immediate application
of the new system in market
channels, and (5) a rugged
cart to carry the portable lab
oratory across rough terrain
without adversely affecting
test equipment.
Initial tests will be made
with milk, wheat, fresh toma
toes, and apples. These prod
ucts are representative of a
larger number of commodities
that could be tested with the
portable system. A report on
the development and testing of
the portable pesticide residue
analysis laboratory will be
made at the completion of the
contract, USDA said.
\\\\\\\\jftv\\\\\vw
• Scout* Conservation
(Continued from Fife 13)
crease is the new requirement
that the badge be attained by
all Scouts seeking Eagle rank.
McKeever stated. "The Soil
Conservation Service will con.
tinue to encourage and conn,
sel Scouts of Pennsylvania to.
ward conservation achie\ e
ment. This rise in Oonseua
tion Merit Badges is, indeed,
reward enough for the effoits
of our past programs with
these boys. They are now moie
acutely aware of the necessity
of protecting wildlife, soil, wa*
ter and woodland."
It has been estimated that
good quality alfalfa hay is
worth 40 percent more per to i
than grass hay as a feed i r
beef cattle.
Harold H. Good
Terre Hill
S.. H. Hiestond Cr Co., Inc.
Saltings
Grubb Supply Co.
Elizabethtown "