Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, August 20, 1966, Image 12

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    —Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 20, 1966
12
John Shelly, (right) discusses the type characteristics of this 20,000-pound,
Very Good (86) cow with (I to r) John Kreider, committee chairman; Clarence
Stauffer, association president; Nelvin Empet, fieldman, Pennsylvania Holstein
Association; and Roy Simpson, Official Classifier. Shelly’s Indian Spring Farm was
the site, Tuesday night, of the Lancaster County Holstein Association Barn Meet
ing. L. F. Photo
• Barn Meeting
f Continued from Page 1)
scoie Some of the other
breeds are rated a full classi
fication class higher than the
Holstein breed,” Roy stated
“We’ve concenti ated on pro
duction and we need high pro
duction,” the classifier said,
“But maybe we have forgotten
some of the good type char
acteristics we also need ” As
an example, Simpson averaged
■the age of all of the cows he
had classified one day in an
other p?it of the country. The
Pregnant Sows
Can Transmit
Hog Cholera
ARS field and laboratory
veterinarians have found that
a sow exposed to hog cholera
vuus dining pregnancy may
transmit the virus to 'her un
born pigs without showing evi
dence of illness herself The
pigs thus, cany the vuus
(Continued on Page 14)
SEEDS
Cayuga Alfalfa
Vernal Alfalfa
Buffalo Alfalfa
Haymor Alfalfa
DuPuits Alfalfa
Naragansett Alfalfa
Red Clover
Pennlate Oi chard Grass
Climax Timothy
Choice Timothy
Pasture Mixture
SEED GRAIN
Balbo R>e
Noiline Winter Oats
Speltz
Cert. Pennrad Barley
Celt. Redcoat Wheat
Celt. Dual Wheat
Cert. Seneca Wheat
MH-30
For Tobacco
WE DELIVER
Farmers Supply
Co.
215 East Fulton St.
Lancaster, Penna.
average age of the cows in two years of production and
these hards was just over 4- go on producing year after
years “We are simply turning year”
over cows if our average age John E Kreider served as
is this low,” he said “The the barn meeting chairman
profitable cow is one who will along with Daniel S Stoltzfus
pay for herself in the fust and Paul N Brubaker.
Reduce Crop Losses!
Feeders, Dairymen! Sealed
Storage Can Help You Do It!
Don’t let hot, dry weather cut you completely out of your corn crop
profits! An investment in Butler sealed storage can save the day!
If you normally expect a yield of 100 bushels per acre—and dry
weather cuts this yield in half—your 50-bushe! crop, cut as silage
and stored in a Butler Stor-N-Feed unit, will produce as many pounds
of beef or pounds of milk as your 100-bushel yield, when harvested
as grain. It also will pay you to mvestigate late forage crops such
as Sudan hybrids. Put up as lo* mcistuie silage, the nutrient yield
per acre is very attractive.
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R. D. 2, Ephrata 717-354-5374
• Pig Roundup
(Continued from Page 1)
will be ear tagged, weighed,
and penned immediately.
The three weight classes will
be; Lightweight 190 pounds
and under: Mediumwcight
193 to 220 pounds; Heavy
weight 225 pounds and up.
Club members are eligible to
show only one pig in each
weight class, but may show in
as many weight classes and
breeds as each has pigs, Plas
tow said. This year, a show
manship class has been added
which will include a junior
and senior division.
The Lancaster Livestock Ex
change will be in charge of the
sale.
• Farm Calendar
(Continued from Page 1)
4-H Pig Roundup, Lancaster
Stockyards.
1:30 p.m., Public auction
sale of all entries m 4-H Pig
Roundup, Lancaster Stock
yards
August 24 8 30 am, South
east District Black & White
Show, at Hershey
State 4-H Dress Revue at
Penn State University.
August 26 9 am., Southeast'
District 4-H Dairy Show at
| AVAILABLE NOW |
I FOR AUGUST SEEDING
i !
* • Cert. Alfa Alfalfa • Cert. Pennscott Bed £
•k ' Clover *
■k • Cert. Cayuga Alfalfat *
i ~ • -Pennlate Orchard Grass f
* • Cert. Vernal Alfalfa |
I ~, ~ • Reeds Canary Grass I
• Cert-.'Buffalo^Alfalfa . I
■k • Climax Timothy f
-k • Cert. Naragansett *
% Alfalfa
■k
-k
■k
•k
■k
■k
•k
•k
-k
■k
■k
■k
■k
•k
■k.
Imam!
J Smoketown / Pa. Ph. 397-3539 I
* j
• Cert. Ladion Clover • Winter Vetch
ORDER YOUR FALL
SEED GRAIN NOW
t > j O
.*• Balbo Rye!,!
s* 'V , r ,■- ■ '?£*'(_ j*\
•' NerlinewWi^tcPjDats
t -•>* * „ s' s.* ■* -
• Cert. Penhrad Barley
Hershey.
State Plowing Contest $
Field Day at John R, Ktxj.
ger’s farm, Belleville Rt,
Mifflin County.
August 26th and 27th
sylvania Poultry Queen Con.
test, Hershey.
Com Superior To
Sorghum-Sudan
For Silage
Corn silage paid off better
for fattening steers than sit.
age from sorghum-sudan-gi ass
hybrids, beef cattle reseaioh.
ers at Jeanerette, La, report,
In trials underway suite
1964, ARS nutritionist W L
Reynolds and N. T. Poche o(
the Louisiana Agricultural Ex
periment Station found that
while sorghum-sudan for out
yielded corn, steel’s made moie
economical gains on corn sit
age
Seeded broadcast in a field
without seedbed preparation or
subsequent culture, sorghum
sudan produced yields oi
about 25 tons per acre. In con
trast, wide-row corn yielded
about 10 tons per acre. Cora
silage was harvested in the
(Continued on Page 13)
• Pasture Mixtures
• Cert. Redcoat Wheat
• Cert. Dual Wheat ■
• Cert. Seneca Wheat'