(Left to right) Jack Hough, National Sales Manager for Babcock Poultry Farm, Inc., Ithaca, New York, shows Rus sell Mease, General Manager of Babcock Hatchery in Lititz and Dr. A. J. Wyatt, Head Geneticist for Babcock, the fine performance recently completed by the B-300 in the Penn sylvania Random Sample Test. Need . . HAY • STRAW - EAR CORN Buy Now and Save! More and more farmers are buying from us for better value and all around satisfaction. Delivered any quantity Phone Area Code 717 687-7631 Esbenshade Turkey Farm “America’s Oldest” PARADISE, PA. r - * I * s John Deere 237 Corn Picker raises the speed limit in high-yield corn Shift up! Pick at speeds up to 5 mph, even when yields run well over 100 bushels. Long, tapered gatherers and high inside shield, funnel stalks right m. Even tangled stalks seldom escape three roller-type gathering chains. There’s new gathering and snapping* speed. And the 237’s spiral snapping rolls cut shelling loss in half. Faster elevators with higher flights move corn up fast. Trash goes too, aided by new rotating trash paddles. New husking rolls —cast-iron spirals against serrated rubber peel husks, pull trash through. You pick clean. See the new 237 soon. Ask about the Credit Plan. ©Landis Bros. Inc. Lancaster 393-3906 Wenger Implement Co. Buck 284-4467 Shofzberger's A. B. C. Groff, Inc. Elm 665-2141 New Holland 354-4191 M. S. Yeorsley & Sons West Chester 609-2990 Babcock Hatchary Has Appreciation Dinner Approximately 2SO poultry men and other guests recently met in Bird in Hand, Pa., for a delicious dinner followed by a program with speakers. The event was sponsored by Bab cock Hatchery, Inc., Lllilz. Pa., as an appreciation dinner for their many customers and friends. Russell A. Mease, general manager of Babcock Hatchery, welcomed his guests and thank ed them for their fine epopera tion. He described the com pany’s growth in the past two years since the new hatchery in Lititz had been operating. He also introduced his key employ ees who were attending the din ner. Jack Hough, national sales manager for Babcock Poultry Farm. Inc, Ithaca, New York, spoke about Babcock’s recent winnings in Random Sample Prepare For Seeding Call us for prompt service on: LIMESTONE - Truck Spread Fast Service FERTILIZER - 020 20 4- 5- 10-10-10 i - i Available in bogs, bulk Trailer spreaders or custom truck spreading. ANHYDROUS AMMONIA ORGANIC PLANT FOOD CO. GROFFTOWN RD„ NEXT TO WATERWORKS Clean Up Your Garden Now To Avoid Next Year’s Problems Dirty flower beds can harbor insects and diseases through the Tests. The B-300, a world fam ous Babcock White Leghorn, has just finished first in income over chick and feed cost for both the Pennsylvania and New Hamp shire tests Hough also told of his company’s great growth throughout the entire woild dur ing the past few years Hough then introduced Dr. Andy J. Wyatt, head geneticist for Babcock, who discussed the Babcock breeding piogram Dr Wyatt used colored slides to il lustrate the complicated work that goes into developing and maintaining the kind of lajing bird demanded by todays poul try industiy NOW! Remember us for after fall plowing! Ph. 392-4963 or 392-0374 YOUR FULL SERVICE DEALER Lancaster Farming, Saturday. October 19.1968 winter, says a University of Maryland horticulturist. "Don’t leave your garden in a mess," cautions Francis R Gouin. As soon as your flowe; beds have lost their beauty, pul' out your annuals and cut back the herbaceous plants. Flowe. beds full of old dead plants de tract from the clean and neat appearance of your home. If your flower beds are pn manly annuals, a steel rake is a useful tool for raking up the de bns and for pulling out the dead or dying plants. If the beds are interplanted with annuals and perennials, it is best to hand pull the annuals, trim back the perennials with sharp lawn clippers, and clean out the bed with a lawn rake Don’t Burn Dividends The cleanings from your gar den may be placed on the corn post pile to rot, Gouin continues. Every fall thousands and thousands of tons of leaves are burned, he explains. This is not only a great loss of much need ed organic matter but it also adds to our serious problem of air pollution. Even though chemical fertiliz ers can supply most nutrient needs of a plant, science has not yet found a practical substitute for organic matter in the soil. When leaves and branches are burned all their important soil building properties are lost to the atmosphere and the ash that is left is material that can be purchased in a fertihzei bag Leaves may be composted by simply piling them neatly and adding a little soil and fertilizer to speed up rotting Oak leaves and pine needles make an ex cellent mulch around ornament al shrubs without composting, Gouin adds Grazing Fields Questions continue to arrive at our Extension Office concern ing the grazing of alfalfa or clov er fields at this time of the year, the concein seems to he the danger of harming the stand and the danger of poisoning the livestock I see little danger in grazing these fields late into the fall providing good manage ment is practiced This valuable growth of legumes will make good forage and if the area is not grazed down too closely, the stand should not be harmed. Neither clover nor alfalfa are poisonous following frost or freeze but the danger of bloat exists at all times especially on wet or frosted forage Animals should be permitted to graze the area only when the plants are dry and only after they have had a feeding of some other kind of forage If the field is top dressed with fertilizer, the ani" mals should be removed from the area until it received a soak mg ram. Hunters Caution Don’t shoot without looking, warns R. G Wingard extension wildlife specialist at Penn State. Each year many people are killed or seriously injured while hunting T» TROVE. w A 21