Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, April 20, 1968, Image 20

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    50—Lancaster Farming. Saturday. April 20.1968
4
Farm Situation Data
Wheat Satisfactory: Wheat atari In the fall. A yield of 34.0
prospects are now quite satis- bushel* J? ol '
factory, accordion to the Penn- cast. This co "JPf r s*
evlvania Crop Reporting Scr- bushel* per acre for the 1967
vice. Much of the acreage had and a 8-year' forages of
Mile or no snow cover during 31.1 huiliols. s cstl-
February and March. Tempera- mated at 14,076.000 “uahels,
turcs were low and there were down more than 3 million
strong drying winds. With bushels and 19 percent from a
warmer weather fields greened year ago.
up surprisingly well. There was Rccord mgh Corn s toc k s:
some winter-kill but this was orn j n s t ora g e on Pennsylvania
i.icsliy limited to late planted f arms was a recorc j high level
fields which got off to a poor for April j At 49,439,000 bush
Uniform, Consistent
High Quality Feed~
Batch to Batch
Nutrition to
Protect a Long
Laying Cycle
Beacon Feeds are supported by continuous research
to assure you all significant developments in nutrition
are tested and proven, then incorporated in your feeds.
Beacon's nutritionists are highly skilled in poultry feed
formulation. These specialists see to it that you get all
the benefits of proven research.
Beacon's quality control program begins with the
selection of ingredient suppliers able to supply con
sistent high quality carload after carload. It
continues with careful tests and analyses of inbound
ingredients and right through the manufacturing pro
cess to the outbound feed.
All processes research, formulation, manufactur
ing, quality control, delivery are intended to make
your Beacon Feeds the most efficient and most pro
ductive of any available.
Recency completed records by 2
Lancaster County Poultrymsn
272 eggs per bird
3,87 feed conversion
433 dajs*
(90% Giade A eggs last pickup)
Cage Operation
Floor Operation 264 eggs per bird
3.77 feed conversion
352 days*
Records started at 20 wks of age
Why noi call us today for particulars on
Beacon Feeds for your Hock . . . delivered on
your farm.
GEHMAN FEED
MILL, INC.
Denver
I. 6. GRAYBILL
& SON
Strasburg
EARL SAUDER, INC. H. JACOB HOOBER
New Holland
WHAT DO YOU GET
WHEN YOU BUY
BEACON??
High
Total
*
Production
Efficient Conversion
of Feed
to Eggs
O. KENNETH
McCRACKEN
BOMBERGER'S
STORE
Elm
BEACONFEEDS
Low Feed
Cost Per
Dozen Eggs
Manheim
Intercourse
oil the quantity 1* about normal In «ome oroai will dried out totaled 273,000,000 tggi during
for January I corn holdlngi. enough to permit manure March. On a dally baiii egg pro-
Barley itocki on forma are alio spreading and icnrto early plow- duction wai over 1 Percent
at a record high and wheat Ing. Fall icodod graini ihowcd more than the February 1008
itocki the hlghcit for the date conilderablc Improvement ai a production and illghtly higher
In many yoari. Onti on farms remit of warmer weather. than the March 1007 figure. A
totaled 7.808,000 bu.. about one- The daily rate of feeding dC *
fifth higher than a year ago but grain and concentrntci wai 18.5 c ‘ ine ,n numbcr of l°y cr »-
alio one-fifth ihort of average, poundi per cow In March. .2 Pennsylvania poultrymon had
Farm Wage Rates Up: .Farm pound more than February and over 1 percent fewer layers on
wage rates arc up in all cate- ,1 pound more than March 1007, hand during March 1068 com
gorics. Competition with Indus- The amount of grain fed to pro- pared with the year earlier fi
try for available manpower cap- duce 1000 pounds of milk de- gure. The number of layers on
able of handling modern farm creased .4 pound from February hand during March declined 1
equipment is responsible. but was 2.5 pounds more than a percent from the previous
Production Slump Continues year earlier. month. The April 1 rate of lay
For the seventh consecutive Preliminary estimates indi- was 1.5 percent more than a
month. Pennsylvania milk pro- cate that there were 733,000 month earlier but only half a
duction per cow has fallen be- milk cows on Pennsylvania percent more than for April 1
low year ago levels. Although farms during March, 17,000 less last year.
daily production per cow aver- than a year earlier. The rate of Th averace Drice rece ived by
aged more than a pound higher decline in cow numbers has p ennsv]vania f armers # or a ll
in March than in February, slowed down sharply from the £ L d during March was 34
monthly output per cow for the‘high rate of previous years. Cow diaS 2 cent? less
month was 50 pounds less than numbers declined bv 40,000 or 5.. t . p ’ IQfi o
a year earlier Many reporters percent from March 1965 to iS" 1968 dnd the
indicate that they have fed all March 1966. The March 1966- Iwmcn iyo ' puce
their good hay and are now 1967 decline of 27,000 was ap- Pennsylvania hatch erymen
forced to feed hay of poorer proximately Z x k percent, while produced 3.3 million egg-type
quality Total milk production the decline of 17,000 from chicks during January-Febru
of 579 million pounds was 8 March 1967-1968 was only 2 per- ary. 25 pei cent less than the
percent below a year ago, with cent. Abundant feed and im- comparable hatch in 1967 The
2 percent fewer cows. proved milk prices are primari- United States egg-type hatch
Weather conditions during ly responsible for the leveling during January-February 1968
March continued cold and windy off of cow numbers. was 71.6 million egg -1 yp e
for the first part of the month. 273 Million Eggs chicks, down 18 percent from
with the last week very mild Pennsylvania egg production 1967.
STAYS MIXED, WON'T CLOG
for fast, one-application weed control in tomatoes
Enide® 50w is a pre-emergence diphenamid weed killer. It mixes quickly and stays'
mixed because it's a 50% wettable powder with extremely fine particles. Application
is fast because sprayer nozzles and screens won’t clog. Enide gives you: Up to
full-season control with one application. K Control of most grasses and many
broadleaf weeds. 18 Reduced cultivation costs. H Faster and cleaner harvests. M
Higher yields and profits. 13s You can apply Enide at seeding, transplanting or within
one month following transplanting. This year have better weed control. Stop in
today and ask for Enide 50w.
NIAGARA CHEMICAL WAREHOUSE
Intercourse 768-8451
LANCASTER BONE FERTILIZER CO
Quavryville 786-2547
OMAR BEAM
Eiverson
N. RICHARD JACKSON
Kirkwood 529-2320
JAMES LANDIS
Quarryville
CHESTER B. NOLT
FRANK PEIFFER 12 Graybill Rd
Mt. Nebo 284-4449 Bareville
,n 7O JOHN Z. MARTIN
im-KU Nevv Holland 354-5848
786-3189
BENJAMIN LANDIS
Paradise 687-6535
H. JACOB HOOBER
Intercourse
768-3431
656-6898