Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, December 17, 1966, Image 7

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    Cow-Level In
Pa. At 95-Year
Low Point
HARRISBURG Another
8,000 milk cbws were lost from
dairy herds in the state in
'November the 28th consecu
tive month in which a decline
was recorded according to
the Pennsylvania Crop Report
ing Service.
The November total, esti
mated at 738,000 cows, was the
'lowest in 95 years. In 1871
there were 740,000 milk cows
reported in Pennsylvania.
Milk production in Novem
ber totaled 531 million pounds,
three million pounds less than
in November 1965. In the first
111 months of this year 6,349
million pounds of milk were
produced in the state, 93 mil-
EARN MORE
MONEY
FROM YOUR
STEERS
THIS
YEARI
Your feed lot is the key to profits. Here’s where top quality
supplements priced for economical weight gains pay off.
Here’s where Red Rose feeds win friends.
this is the supplement you will want to use as a
rtfixing ration for your home-grown grains or as a
protein supplement to balance the feeding of low
protein roughages.
* T- *
IftJslt frfnru fliStriehMottificatlons' are- double th*
tevels of 32 Beef Cattle Supplement.
AvtUtblo with Or without Diothy/si/lbestrof,
When you feed Red Rose Free-Choice Mineral your
-cows will be protected against mineral deficiency, and
at the same time assured good herd health and
will perform better in the milk line.
DON'T FORGET . . *
Your hogs will become pork FAST
when you raise them on
SWINE FEEDS
Red, Rose “Litter to Market” feeds are the feeds you
need to start your pigs and feed them all the
way to market time. These feeds have been scienti
ficadly developed to .reduce the cost of producing pork
by Converting more of the feed into good solid meat.
Your pig profits will start when you place Red Rose
Swipe Feeds in your feed troughs. Start to use them
now;
■*****■■*■* *r**yrk *-y*ir\ •?■*■£* fr* >• *
Po. Bankers Assn.
Gefs Agricultural
Award 23rd Time
The Agricultural Award of
The American Bankers Asso
ciation has been presented to
the Pennsylvania Bankers As
sociation in recognition of the
PBA’s service to agriculture
in the commonwealth.
lion pounds below the 11-monith
total last year.
Average production per cow,
however, continued to increase.
The November average of 720
pounds up 30 pounds from
a year ago was the highest
for any November on record.
Production costs also increased,
with the value of the ration
fed per 100 pounds of milk
produced up 28 cents from
November 1965.
Rbo^Rose
33 BEEF CATTLE SUPPLEMENT
Rbo^fßmsß
50 BEEP CATTLE SUPPLEMENT
YOUR COWS
NEED
MINERALS!
r Red Ipt Rose
FREE-CHOICE
MINERAL
Provides a complete
range of minerals in
balanced amounts.
/?£Q^l/?fISE
This is the twenityt)hlrd con
secutive year that the PBA
has received the award.
The ABA award is present
ed each 'year by its Agricul
tural Committee to the state
bankers associations of those
states whose programs and ac
tivities have been of notable
service to agriculture during
the preceding year.
The .PBA’s program is con
ducted by its nine-member Ag
ricultural Committee.
PBA President Charles H.
Bracken, president, Marine Na
tional -Bank, Brie, commented
that the award “attests to the
fine job the Committee has
done in the past and is cur
rently doing”
Outstanding committee pro
grams cited by the ABA in
cluded the annual agricultural
credit conference held in
State College and suppoit of
For All Of Your
Feed Needs Call
These Red Rose
Dealers:
Welter Binkley & Son
Lititz
Brown & Rea
Atglen
El verson Supply Co.
Elverson
I. B.'Groybili & Son
Rfsfton - Strasburg
L. T. Geib Estate
Manheim
E. Musses Heisey & Son
Mt. Joy
Heistond Bros.
Elizabethtown
A. L. Herr & Bro.
Quarryville
David B. Hurst
Bowmansville
Mountviile Feed Service
Mountviile
Musser Forms, Inc.
Columbia
Musser's Mill
The Buck
Chos. E. Sauder & Sons
Terre Hill
Ammon E. Shelly
Lititz
L M. Snavely
Lititz
E. P. Spotts, Inc.
Honey Brook
H. M. Stauffer & Sons,
Inc.
Witmer
•r-jr ? *,
Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 17, 1966
the 4-H Club movement arid
many agricultural community
service programs.
Area Teacher Attends
Milk Marketing Conf.
Garland Gingerich, vocation
al agriculture instructor at
Penn Manor High School, was
among teachers from Blair
County to Philadelphia attend
ing the Milk Marketing In-
Service Workshop last week at
Harrisburg.
The one-day program was
sponsored by the Inter-State
Milk Producers Cooperative,
and was conducted by Inter-
State personnel including, Dr
James E. Honan, general man
ager; Dr Paul E. Hand, econ
omist; Golden Davis, manage
ment assistant; and Boyd C.
Gartley, director of public rel
ations, Inter-State fieldman
SAMPLE COPIES FREE
Copies of LANCASTER FARMING are not always
easy to find they are not sold on newsstands and
perhaps some of your friends may not be acquainted
with our weekly service.
We’ll be glad to send, without charge, several
copies of LANCASTER FARMING to your triends or
business associates. Just write their names and ad
dresses below (You’ll be doing both them and us a
favor!)
Street Address & R. D.
City
Street Address & R. D.
City
(You are not limited to two names. Use
separate sheet for additional names.)
Your Name
Address
q CHECK here if you prefer to send a Year’s (52
issues) GIFT subscription for $2 each ($3 each out
side of Lancaster County) to your fi lends listed
above. If so $ enclosed, or
[~j Bill me later.
Please mail this form to:
LANCASTER FARMING
CIRCULATION DEPT.
P. O. BOX 266
LITITZ, PENNA.
YOU’VE GOT TO HAVE A SYSTEM-GO JAMESWAY POWER C HOPING
MOTHMP galvanizing
PROTECTS B!G| # BABN
EQUIPMENT KIR AS
LONG AS YOU OWN IT
|] M. E. SNAVELY
445 South Cedar Street Ph. 626-8144 Lititz, Penua. 17543
PSU TAX EXPERT TO BE
IN READING AREA DEC 21
B. Wayne Kelly, Penn State
University farm management
specialist, is spending the
month of December traveling
about the state in a series of
programs for Income tax prac
titioners and farmers prepar
ing their own tax returns ov
assisting others.
The program to be held
closest to Lancaster County
will be in Reading at the Met-
Edison Building, North on
Route 61 The program will
run from 10 am to 3 p m„
and will include the latest rul
ings aftecting faimeis tax re*
poi tang.
Charles Cowan also attended.
The highlight of the day for
agiicultuie teachers was milk
marketing methods adapted for
classroom discussion by milk
maiketmg specialists
State
•
State
James way dips steel in
to molten zinc to protect
both inside and outside sur
faces Against rust and cor
rosion. This gives life-long
protection that only James
way’s haavy-coat process
can provide. Jamesway uses
30 pounds of zinc to cover
the same surface we could
coat with a single pound of
aluminum paint l
James way’s hot-dip gal
vanizing assures fine ap
pearance, too. And you are
free from the work, trouble,
and expense of periodic
cleaning and painting. It
gives you permanent value
with long-range savings.
7
'3COE