—Lancastor Farming. Saturday, October 12.1968 6 Spread Eagle (Continued from Page 1) seventh generation to run this who whisked the tour into the _ ' .. . . .. . „ mAAilwrt nnr\ivt nH J eyC Fl ODI taint StOTt) tll6 1 CCOfOS g graduate management team for a slide presentation, said their ‘J* 1 “J? 1 ® d “ c ‘\ ‘’HS land is “rich soil, right next to J{J® *° ra • i M /1Al „, M A the We nave the maiket TS /h«mv "i thVv before we increase production,” rSmftod "!» bushel dried ™ li ”t“'~d''S2Sl» ..helled corn per acre. SSS?wm any more eggs on the market, according to the president, be cause the increased production will go into their liquid egg market or into their chicken corn soup, chicken noodle soup, ham and bean soup with eggs, chicken and egg croquettes chicken a la king, chicken noo dle casserole or sponge cake They have removed fence ows and put little five and ten icre fields together to make arge fields, comparable to the nid-west. Their 2,000 acres of ’orn this year are planted in 30- .nch rows with 25,000 to 30,000 plants per acre to take advan tage of their abundant supply of ;hicken manure. The fields are planted with six row planters xhey have a tractor-trailer and harvested with two huge ' ian jj truck that hauls liquid eggs ncker-shellers which run 24 directly to noodle makers and nours a day when the corn gets jj a jj ers This market has been ready. All-wheel drive, army developed by using their four -iirplus trucks and huge 133- e gg breaking machines that will horse power, eight-bottom plow handle 80 cases per hour, to ractors are used to keep the o p en on j y to p quality eggs. Tra neld operation moving. ditionally, the egg break-out The real story at Spread Eagle business has been a salvage op , . . , „ „„„„ eration Elwood saw an oppor hough, is chickens, eggs and se jj a high aualitv ™™ la S