(••con Fetds plant unit from 1820*1945, when P 1 next year. [Continued from Pago 1) p “ rc fj“ ed feed manufactur- The original Beacon Co. ing facilities at Eastport, N. Y. mer B c d with Spencer Kellog teral manager of Beacon's Three years later the Ander- & Sons, Inc. in 1057, and be rk area. That position' is son Grain & Feed Co. at York camo a part of Textron, Inc., v held by James A, Price, was purchased. when the latter acquired the res Campbell will continue In 1081, Beacon began its merged firm in 1901. < production manager at the expansion •k plant, it, was announced, locations, which will number People who fall for everv (eacon operated as a single ten when the newest unit at thing seldom Btand for much Philadelphia, New York is corn- TRAILMAKER SILVERTOWN SNOW TIRES FOR YOUR CAR... No discount coupons honored during this sale. Made with n SST y NYLON V for $37.90 cord NO MONEY DOWN • No Trade-In Needed! B. F. GOODRICH STORE The Straight-Talk Prince & Vine Sts., Lancaster PH. 392-2196 Tire People BUY 2 satellite feed HOLLAND STONE a bocurtf you can a/forct) Inside, outside, you’ll find die rich 1 quarried look o£ HOLLAND STONE adds a touch of real ele gance to your building designs. And yet, HOLLAND STONE is one of the most economical build ing materials today. Its unique versatility in site and shape lends n structural freedom to builders, meeting new ideas, as well as cost problems. Comes in a wide choice of warm, distinctive colors, pins Colonial white. MEW OLLAND CONCRETE PRODUCTS, INC. ijHmmum knnsyumm* GET AN 111 b. TURKEY FREE Turkeys supplied by Buy Right Thriftway Markets Inc. All Lane. Co. turkeys. B.E Goodrich Snow Tires mean PASTER STARTS/SAFER STOPS/ BEST POSSIBLE COJVTROL/ Yost Cow And Greiner Herd, DHIA Leaders Leading in the latest month ly report of the Red Rose Dairy Herd Improvement As sociation of Lancaster County were a registered Holstein cow owned by John S. Yost, Kinz ers HI and the 19-head herd of icgistered Holsteins owned by Stanley Gieiner, Manheim R 4. The Yost cow completed the highest Septembei lactation pi oducing 22,097 lbs. of milk and 892 lbs. of butterfat. Second high cow tested for 305 days was owned by Amos B. Lapp, Gordonville Rl. This legisteied Holstein had 18,805 lbs milk and 874 of fat. Completing the highest mon thly lactation, the Gieiner heid averaged 1447 lbs of milk and 58 lbs ot butterfat. Runnei up for the month was the 35 3-head herd of registei ed Holsteins owned by John S Shelly, Manheim Rl, with an average of 1402 lbs of milk and 55 lbs. of butterfat. Education is what you re member aftei you forgot what you learned. NOV. 7 THRO NOV. 12 INCLUSIVE Size 7.00x13 blackwall tubeless plus §3.80 Federal Excise Tax Lancaster Farming, Saturday, November 5, 1966—9 ly named head of the Poulliy Science department at Penn State University. Early Payment To Farmers In Feed Grain Plan Advance payments to faim eis participating m the feed gram piogram will be con tinued in 1967, the U S De- partment of AgnculUue an nounced this week In the past advances weie made only fiom diversion pay ments Since diveision pay ments aie being authouzed only on small farms in 1967 50 percent of the pnce-suppoi i payment may be advanced to other farms On small fauns, 50 percent of both the diver sion and price-support pay ments may be advanced To obtain an advance pay ment, the farmer applies for it at the time he signs up to participate in the program. The dates for signup in 1967 have not been set but will be announced well before plant ing time. Advance payments are an important source o£ capital for farming operations. Price-support payments for corn aie computed at the rate of 30 cents a bushel times the farm’s projected yield on 50 percent of the farm’s base acreage for corn For giam sorghum, the calculation is the same except that the rate is 53 cents per hundredweight. Projected yields will average a little higher nationally in 1967 than in 1966 The diversion, payment fot small farms (farms with feed grain bases of 25 acres or less) will be equal to 20 percent of the total support for the first 20 percent of base acreage di verted and 50 percent of sup port on any additional acres diverted, up to the total base. What j Are Farmers I Saying About j Lancaster Farming? 5 A Steer feeder near Mariheim says ... “I be gan reading L. F. last year, and the steer market im proved almost immediate ly ” ? A Daliryman from, the New Holland section said ... “I started reading L. F. last fall, just shortly after I took my cows off that dried-up pasture and sta bled ’em. Would you be lieve it, the following month my butterfat test jumped five points!’’