Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, October 22, 1966, Image 6

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    6 —Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 22, 1966 _ Order 4 Milk
• Hoy Warning continue producing muk # «md Price Gains 57c
(Continued from Pago 1) mea A t ’ ® ull cautioned. . *
“check local price* through the t ' me ’ he Over I Car AfifO
reliable sources" before buy- P o, " te ? out «>■» p «mp*
tag. At the same lime. Bull )* n }* fa ™ cr » are harvesting
branded the increase "ridlcu- * bc,r ,malle,t corn crop In
lotts and unnecessary, In light 36 **■" “ > nd 4 P 08 * 1 * 1 ? ‘ he
of an above-average hay crop ,cc ® lld *mallest crop * n *
ta the nation this year.” century.
The U.S. Department of Ag- Corn production in the state Valley federal order averaged
rlculture on October 1 esti- y eal ‘ 1* expected to total $6.15 per hundredweight at 3.6
mated 1986 hay production in 32,604,000 bushels of grain, ac- percent butterfat, according to
the nation at 118,109,000 tons. col 'ding to latest estimates of the latest report (from the Mar-
This compares (to a five-year Pennsylvania Crop Report- &et Administrator. This is 13
average (1960-64) of 117,763,- in S Service. cents above the August price
000 tons, the Secretary point- If so, it will be the small- approximately 35 percent less
ed out. est coin crop in the state
By contrast, Pennsylvania’s since 1930 when production than last year’s production It
1966 hay crop is estimated ,&taled only 19.074,000 bushels also is 36 percent short of the
at 3138,000 tons, the small- of S> ain. That was the year of 1960-64 average, and scarcely
est since 1962 and 8.4 per- depression, dust storms in the more than half the size of the
cent less than last year’s West and drought in Pennsyl- crop produced in 1958. That
production. vania a drought almost as year, Pennsylvania farmers
_ ~ . , . . severe as the one that parched harvested a record 61,974,000
Both hay and com, basic state cropland this past sum . bushels of
feeds of dairy and beef cat- mei , The previous high was set
tie, were ravaged by Pennsy - in 1919 when production to
vama’s fifth consecutive year (Weather Bureau records taled 61)916>00 o bushels. That
of drought. Many farmers show rainfall in 1930 was the first year in wMch
were forced to feed first cat- eight; to nine .inches below recMds were kept for com
fang hay during the dry normal. In the first eight harves ted as grain and that
mfonths and now have little, if months of 1966, rainfall de- n roduced for «Uaf»e
any, on hand for winter feed- fluencies in most of the state y Between i®iB>i 8> the
«ng. This means they must ranged from 5.72 to 8-89 smallest corn or was report .
J? ay ’ ® nd .f 15 im P° rtm 1 t m^ s -> t ed in 1893 when 34,750,000
that they buy it as economical- The> state’s 1966 corn crop, , bushels were , harvested fox
ly as possible if they are to Secretary Bull pointed out, is both an(i silage>
What make
little pellet
your big mi]
producer?
Agway
NEW HOLLAND LANCASTER QUARRYVILLE HONEY BROOK
by Everett Newswanger
Staff Reporter
The average price paid to
farmers for milk produced in
Seotember under .the Delaware
AGWAY INC.
this year and on increase of
67 cents from the market ov
erage for September 1665. Ad
justments for milk Containing
bu'tterfat of more or less than
the 3.5 standard will be at 9
cents per tenth of a percent.
The sharp September-to-Sep
tember rise in the market
price was the result of the
combination of a 40-cent high
er Class I milk price ($6.40);
a Class II return ($4.30) that
was 94 cents above a year
ago, and a Class I utilization
rise of over 4 percentage
points to 86.61 percent.
The 86.61 percent of produc
er receipts utilized for fluid
milk purposes during Septem
ber represents the highest per
centage since October 1964.
ANNOUNCEMENT
We will have a Display and Sales Booth at the
STANDARDBRED HORSE AUCTION
OCTOBER 31 - NOVEMBER 1,2, 3,
and
THE PENNSYLVANIA LIVESTOCK SHOW
NOVEMBER 5-12
HARRISBURG, PENNSYLVANIA
Write For Current Price Lists (
Please visit our booth.
DR. A. C. DANIELS, INC.
'QUALITY VETERINARY PHARMACEUTICALS
for HOME TREATMENT of ANIMALS
since 1878.
Webster, Mass.
First, Agway T s Nu-Milkerpels 16 is 100%- pelleted. This
saves you time and labor, because the pellets flow freely
in bulk bins and automated systems.
Full pelleting also allows Agway to use lower-cost (yet
high milk-producing) ingredients than the ingredients
which must be used in makings natural-textured feed. This
lowers'the cost per unit of energy or TON in
J Nu-Milkerpeis—which is reflected in its price
M to you.
Nu-Milkerpeis contain urea as a protein
irce. Why? Urea makes high-quality protein
available in the cow’s rumen. She makes more
■esearch indicates urea aidsin the digestion of
ration.
rpels use lignin sulfate 'as the pellet binder.
This organic material, unlike the inert day in many pellets,
actually adds feeding value to the pellet—about $1.50
worth per ton.
Agway puts into this pellet everything that is known on
the subject of how to make a dairy pellet profitable for
you. Test this statement. Compare Nu-Milkerpels’ 75
therms of milk-makingenergy, and its price, against the
energy and price of your present dairy ration.
Then put these economic facts to work for you. Order
Nu-Milkerpels 15, Agway Inc.
Order No. 4 plants received
milk from 4,894 producers in
September, who delivered an
average of 984 pounds daily. A
year earlier, 5,397 producer*
were reported by Itflie order
handlers and the daily average
shipment was 926 pounds. Be*
cause the yearly gain in milk
deliveries per producer did not
compensate fully for the fewer
number of dairy farmers, mar*
ket milk receipts declined 3.6
percent from September 1965.
Total fluid milk sales were
6.3 percent more than the
Class I marketings last Septem
ber. (Daily fluid milk sales of
4.62 million pounds in Septem
ber compared with 4.24 mil
lion pounds per dlay the previ
ous month.
Agway
DAIRY FEEDS & SERVICES