6SS Elected V-P In named vice president of the Diffenbach, New Holland Sales iarkef Organization Pennsylvania livestock market Stables, was elected state di- Harold Hess, of Vintage owners organization in a meet- rector to the Certified Live rales Stables, recently was ing held at Ebensburg. Abram stock Markets Assn. H M. s, feeders everywhere are talking about Ful-O-Pep Supplement In feedlot after feedlot—commercial and farm—feeders are reporting better gains and conversions at lower feed cost. The reason: It’s Ful-O-Pep Cattle-izer Beef Supplement... de signed to enable the beef animal to get up to 20% more energy from the same amount of feed... and to use that extra energy for faster, more efficient gains. Gain, efficiency of gain, cost of gain, market value of cattle, and other factors are reflected in net return. And net return , cattlemen are reporting, is higher when Ful-O-Pep Cattle-izer Beef Supple ment is fed. GRUBB SUPPLY COMPANY Enrobe**.™ H. M. Stauffer Stevens Feed Mill, Inc. & Sons, Inc. Stevens Witmer xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx'6cKxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ! WHY USE SUBSTITUTES WHEN MH-30 Discuss These Points With Your AGWAY Man Today FOR APHID CONTROL USE THIODAN 2E NEW HOLLAND LANCASTER QUARRYVILLE 354-2146 394-0541 786-2126 Store Hours: Week Days 8:001 - 5:00 Sats. 8:00 - 12:00 Noon Agway Stop in and talk it ow* l MH-30 stops SUCKERS COLD Is A Cash Investment It is possible to obtain a 5 for l^eturri. “XJi No other sucker control can yield this benefit. Avoiloble in one ond five gallon cans and 30 gallon drums Tobacco Shears, Spears, Aprons AGWAY INC. Harold H. Good Terre Hill Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 12,1967 — CCC GRAIN BINS OFFERED FOR SALE Commodity Credit Corpora* tion has authorized the sale of metal storage bins, the first load is expected to ar rive in Lancaster County In the near future, according to ASCS office manager Miss Dorothy Y. Neel. The bins hold 3250 bushel and weigh about 4000 pound. They include an 18 foot foun dation ring, circulating fan and nuts and bolts. Bins will be trucked to a central point and farmers must bear the cost of moving them to the farm. Sale will be through sealed bids, and minimum price is expected to be between $450 and $5OO. • July Prices (Continued from Page 1) decline for hay and gram prices. Milk jumped 15 cents to $5 50 per hundredweight fol lowing the normal seasonal pattern. Poultry and egg prices rose seven percent as a result of a three-cent increase in eggs. The current price of eggs at 33 cents a dozen is still consider ably below a year ago. Nationally, the index of pric es received by farmers advanc ed three-fourths of one per cent. “All-American” Deadline Nears HARRISBURG Dairy cat tlemen were reminded today that entry lists for the Penn sylvania All-Ameucan Dairy Show close Tuesday, Aug. 15. The fourth annual exposition will be held Sept. 11-15 in the Farm Show Building. Harold R. McCulloch, show manager, said all entues with postmarks of Aug 15 or earli er will be accepted Those mailed after that date will be declined. Dauymen irom the United States and Canada may enter purebred bulls and females of the Ayrshire, Biown Swiss, Guernsey, Holstein, Jersey and Milking Shorthorn breeds. The All-American also will be the site of the Eastern National Holstein Show. Cash premiums total more than $50,000. Special trophies will be presented by the re spective Pennsylvania breed associations to the grand cham pion female in each .breed. Premiums also are provided for the Pennsylvania Junior Dairy Show on opening day and the Pennsylvania Black and White Show the following day. McCulloch says he antici pates about 2,500 entries 1,700 in the open class, 300 in the Black and White class, and 500 in the Junior Dairy Show. .Show sponsors are the Penn sylvania Department of Agri culture and its Farm Show Commission, and the Pennsyl vania Dairy and Allied Indus tries Association. • Guernsey Breeders (Continued from Page 1) “I can go into a man’s place where he has DHIA records and can brag about certain cows and his herd average/Yet*"** the most important thingahout the records is they must be analyzed and used to deter mine profits. The only reason you have a cow is to have her take one dollar’s worth of feed and turn it into moie than one dollar’s worth of milk If she doesn’t, you better sell her,” dig stated JUDGING CONTEST Scoring top honors in the morning judging contest was Mrs. J. Rohrer Witmer, Willow Street R 2 Mrs Witmer won the true-type model cow. In the men’s division Elam Mull, Quarryville Rl. was first; James Myers, 1150 Village Road, Lancaster topped the youth ’division. Other winners included - La dies Division - Dorothy Den linger, Gordonville Rl, second; Mrs. Herbert N. Myers, 1150 Village Road: third; and Thel ma Garber, Willow Street R 2, fourth; Men’s Division-Rohrer Witmer, Willow Street R 2, sec ond; Elmer Lapp, Kinzer, third; and Glenn Shultz, Pequea Rl, fourth. Youth Division - Cindy Breneman, Strasburg Rl, sec ond; Donald Breneman, Stras burg Rl, third; and James Esh leman, Strasburg Rl, fourth. FEED ROSE PLANTS Feed roses during late July if you want them to bloom dur ing early fall, says J. Robert Nuss, extension ornamental horticulturist. About half a cup of a- 5-10-10 fertilizer scratch ed 3, into -the ' soil’s surface around each plant should be enough, Then, water until soaked around the plant to a depth of about six inches. Feeding roses early in the fall may cause rapid growth, which could result in winter mjuiy, says Nuss Another fault with being punctual is that everybody thinks you never have any- 9