Store Spray Equipment Properly For Fewer Springtime Problems •If you clean and-store your (1) Drain all spray materials spray equipment this fall you from tank, pump, boom and ■yirlll .have fewer problems next hoses. spring, believes Dr. James Paro- (2) Remove plugs from the chetti, weed, control specialist. ends Of the boom and flush out at' the University of Maryland, accumulations of pesticides or You should use rubber gloves other foreign materials, and boots when cleaning and (3) Fill tank with clean wa flushing 'sprayers. Be sure ter, run the pump, and flush cleaning or flushing water does through the boom, not puddle or flow into streams, - (4 , Fi n the tank with clean ponds or ditches. water again and add 1 oz. per Dr. Parochetti has these sug- gallon of household ammonia, gestions for keeping ydur spray- Run the pump to agitate and er in good shape. flush solution through the VALLEY ACRES GUERNSEY DISPERSAL Monday, October 21,10:00 A.M. At the farm, located at Kill am, 7a., 7 mile* *a«t of Tork on *t. ;$3O. Zn the oantar of Xallam turn aonth at tba Bank on Broad Street for *4 mile. 153 HEAD 84 COWS, 15 BRED and 54 OPEN HEIFERS ’67 DHIA Ave: 10418#M 502#F 109 Cows 43 with records over 10,OD0#M. An Intensely Butterfftt bred herd of finest quality. 30 by Mulhocaway Huttorfat Dispatch 720 dans, in 338 herds ave 10118-487. Aleo to be sold before cattle aale atarte: 1,000 Gal. and 300 Gal Girton Tank, compressors and motors, 6 Surgre units for pipe line, 1,000 feet of grlass and stainless steel line, and pump for G units, Electro brain automatic wash. TOR CATALOGS WHITE TO: PENNA. GUERNSEY BREEDERS’ ASS’N. P. O. Bo\ 4">S Camp Hill, Pa, 17011 HORSE SALE Monday Eve, October 21, 1968 MARTIN’S SALE STABLES Blue Ball, Pa. along Route 23 Load of Standard-Bred, Saddle and Pleasure horses from Kentucky. Load of Standard-Breds from Ohio Tack at 6 00 P.M. Horses at 7 00 P M. PAUL Z. MARTIN Ph. (717) 354-6671 Next Horse Sale Friday Eve, November 8. BTH ANNUAL FALL FEEDER SALE 500 HEAD 500 Aberdeen Soles Company Livestock Auction Market Located on Md. Rt. 22, 6 mi. east of Bel Air, Md. (via U. S. Rt. 1) and 6 mi. west of Aberdeen, Md. (via U. S. Rt. 40 or 195 Kennedy Highway) on SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1968 1:00 p.m. Sharp All cattle will be sorted and graded to be sold in lots to suit buyers. Majority of cattle are locally acclimated. Cattle accepted as early as 2 days prior to sale Trucking service available For further information, contact the following- Aberdeen Sales Company Livestock Auction Market Aberdeen, Md. 21001 Phone 301-734-6050 Night 301-734-7105, 272-1368 AYRSHIRE AUCTION Pa. State Keystone Classic TUES., OCT. 29, at Noon, LANCASTER, PA. at the Guernsey Sale Barn, 6 Mi. E. of City along Rt. 30. 65 Top Quality Ayrshires 40 Cows - 25 Bred Heifers 1 Bull Young cows have Ist-calf records to 12,170 M 4.4% 531 F TOM WHITTAKER, Sale Mgr., Brandon,* Vt. boom. This solution should wash most common pesticides out of the equipment. Rinse several times with clean water after draining cleaning solution. (5) Remove nozzles and screens from the boom, disas semble and clean. Store them dry or immersed in a jar of light oil. (6) Drain the spray pump thoroughly and then coat the inside with soluble oil. This will prevent the pump from sticking during storage. (7) If the tank is the type that can rust, rinse and coat interior with soluble oil. (8) Be sure boom is drained (remember it can freeze) and support it so it can not be dam aged by other machinery. Do not store in contact with soil or manure accumulations as they will rust (iron) or corrode (alu minum). (9) Remove and clean all hoses, roll them up, avoiding sharp kinks and store indoors for the winter. Since 1961, electric systems, mostly cooperatives, financed by the Rural Electrification Admin istration, made a total of 692 re tail rate reductions for combin ed annual savings to their con sumers of 521.7 million. COMPLETE SELLOUT PUBLIC SALE OF FARM, DAIRY CATTLE EQUIPMENT AND SOME HOUSEHOLD GOODS Along Route 241, 5 miles West of Elizabethtown, 1 Mile East of 441, Conoy Township. SATURDAY, NOV. 9, 1968 Valuable dairy farm of approximately 82 acres, 72 perches, includes 5 acres of woodland improvements include 2 story frame dwelling with 3 car attached garage, modern dairy barn built in 1960, 36 x 84, large milk house, 2 silos, also frame barn with attached shed roof. Also frame apart ment building with Aluminum Siding with two 4 room apart ments, hot water auto, oil heat, and good bank barn appro ximately 32 x 60. Two streams and never failing well. 60 HIGH GRADE HOLSTEIN DAIRY CATTLE 38 cows, 3 bred heifers, 6 service age heifers, 12 younger Mostly homeraised and young and many from reg dams 11 fresh since July, 2 by sale time, 4 more this year Cows in this herd have milked to 90 lbs per day 20 years of Atlantic Breeding Ser vice Vaccination with 30 day charts. 500 gal Girton tank with Walker stamp, used 8 months, SP 11 milker pump with 3 Surge units, stainless steel tubs, 2 carrying buckets, can rack, milk cooler, 8 cow mats, 24 milk cans, 30 gal electric water heater Sputmck milk porter with compressor (8 mo ), 3 tractors, Farm all Super M, W D 45 diesel with mounted 4 bottom plow, C Allis Chalmers with 2 row cultivators, 28 transport burch disc, 10 ft Brilhon cultipacker, IHC 101 10 ft self-propelled combine, 32 ft Kmgwyse elevator, AC 7 ft side mounted mower, Cunningham crimper, 2 Ford balers, one 530 with thrower; N.H 5 bar rake, 717 NH forage chopper (1 year), AC blower with motor, Grove silage wagon (2 years), 2 rubber tired silage wagons with false fronts, 2 row IHC cornplanter, 2 Superior disc drills, 11 and 13, 10 ft New Idea fertilizer drill, Hawk Built manure spreader, manure loader and snow blade, 12 ft spring harrow, field spray er, Mac Kassic portable feed mixer, Danuser post hole digger, 3 augers, 130 AMP Forney electric welder, air compressor, 14 in electric drill, Socket set, 2 extension ladders, pips vise, electric motors, chain saw, emery wheel, tap and dye set, hydraulic jack, bag wagon, small irrigation pump with electric motor, corn shell er, steel posts, hog troughs, new snow fence, cement mixer, venti lating fan, log chains, water troughs, feed cart, barbed wire, chicken crates F 6 Ford 1953 with good bed 6 ton Big Dutchman feed bin with auger unloader, cattle trailer, 2 sets of tractor chains, Ist, 2nd, 3rd cutting of hay and straw by the ton HOUSEHOLD GOODS 2 bedroom suites, clocks, old fashioned handmade sideboard with carvings (good) 18 ft Harden freezer, 22 single rifle, 12 gauge single shot gun, metal cabinets, space heaters, extension table and chairs, piano, crocks, etc Terms by MRS. WILLIS (BILL) SHOEMAKER J. Everett Kreider 284-4517 Carl Diller 464-2233 Auctioneers Alspach and Ryder, Attorneys Lunch by Stevens Hill Church Order of sale: 9:30 small items and tools, 11:00 farm ma chinery'and household goods, 1:00 real estate followed by dairy. Lancaster Farming. Saturday. October 19.1968 A View From The Governor's Office The most intense effort in Pennsylvania history to con serve and restore our precious natural resources scored anoth er first in nearby Hershey this week when more than 1,000 State and local officials met to begin implementation of our new Solid Waste Management Act. The first law of its kind in the Nation to create a State and lo cal governmental partnership in both the planning and disposal of the unwanted products of an affluent age, the new act was considered in its entirely by par ticipants in the Second Annual Governor’s Conference on En vironment. Imagine a pile of garbage, trash and old junk so high it would cover the State Capitol, the whole City of Harrisburg, and spill over, chanking and banging, onto the countryside of Dauphin, Perry and Cumberland Counties. Picture enough old bottles, 9:30 A.M. By Gov. Raymond P. Shafer cons, newspapers, plastic bags and old automobiles to fill a pa rade of garbage trucks from Maine to California, five times over, and you have some idea of how much pure junk—lo mil lion tons of it—we Pennsylva nians discard each year. From that, too, you will get some idea of the magnitude of the problem faced by the plan ners at Hershey. Yet, this is not the first time in Pennsylvania history that conservationists and enlightened public officials sat down and came up with an swers to problems involving our land, water and air. Through the years, Pennsyl vania has been first in forestry, first in clean streams, first in prohibiting destruction of our land by strip mining, m solving the problems of mine subsid ence, burning culm banks and underground mine flies. In the past twenty months alone, Pennsylvania not only en acted the first solid waste man agement act in the Nation but also established the first State wide air monitoring system and built the first acid mine drain age treatment plant in the world. But pei haps the most dramat ic and far-reaching of our new programs is our new $5OO mil lion Land and Water Conserva tion Fund approved by the vot ers in April, 1967. A 10-year program to usher in a new Golden Age of Conservation, this fund has been allocated this way: —s2oo million will be spent to restore land ravaged by past strip mining operations, and to cleanse 3,000 miles of rivers and streams polluted by acid mine diainage —sl2s million for the devel opment ()t recreational areas on land purchased by the Common wealth with Project 70 funds —sl2s million in matching funds to local communities for the construction of sewage treat ment plants —s7s million in matching funds to local communities to build parks, swimming pools and playgrounds on land pur chased under Project 70. Under this last program, the Department of Community Af fairs has thus far allocated $7 9 million in Project 500 funds to 81 different communities for de velopment of 110 new parks and recreational areas. In addition, the Department of Health has allocated $9 6 mil lion for new sewage treatment facilities in 57 communities, the Department of Forests and Wa ters has earmarked $19.7 mil lion for development of 12 new State parks and historical sites, the Game Commission $3 5 mil lion for nine projects and the Fish Commission $2 1 for three. Of perhaps more importance is the fact that the Department of Mines and Mineral Industries already has set aside $314 mil lion of its share of the fund to begin the job of cleaning up lands, waters and air currently ruined by past mining practices. For it is the qualitative, rather than quantitative, changes in our future environment that really counts. Since the telephone program began m 1949, the Rural Elec trification Administration has financed 874 telephone systems, 232 of them cooperatives whose loans have totaled $553 4 mil lion These systems are provid ing new or improved all-dial telephone seivice to I'9 million 23