A Classified Ad It Pays! % THE MOST COMPLETE STOCK OF LH. PARTS IN THE AREA CHECK 0 m SPECIALS Gfcmitoe-Eff.G. MANURESPREAOER WEB—ONLY Reg. Price $ 6&00- 4Bk9Mor KO'FSjjd. Reg. Pi-ice $HS.Ofr -$86111(1 for- 125 T Sfcd. Reg. Price $120.00 ALSO NEW IDEAWEBS FOR #‘B ANOIDA 50-LB. ROLES TOBACCO PAPER IZe Per Pound —5% DISCOUNT on 2 or More Rolls PERMANENT ANTI-FREEZE Only SL62 Gallon SPECIAL OFFER 20% SFF ON NEW TRACTOR BATTERIES, i With YourOld 1 Battery- lii Trade. ;i ARIENS SNOW BLOWERS , 1' For Tminedlate Delivery ! Used 70fchnd 424'Tractors C B. HOOKER s. SON Intercourse, Penna Phone: 768-8231 WENGER’S farm Machinery, Inc. NEW & USED MACHINERY South Race St., Myerstown, Pa; FEED MILLS Gehl Mix Mill McKissic Grinder Mix Letz PTO Grinder SNOW EQUIPMENT Heat Housers Snow Blowers Space Heaters V Plows Tire Chains 3 pt. Blades Snow Plows LOADERS New Idea John Deere Sanders Kelly Ford . Horn McCormick FLAIL CHOPPERS John Deere Brady Gehl Massey Ferguson New Holland Schultz TRACTORS John Deere Models 4010,4020, 3020,420,720 Farraall 806, 706, 560, 460, 400 Oliver 1850 , 880,1600, 770 New & Used Ford 3000 and 4000 Allis Chalmers DIO, Dl7, WD4S, WD and CA Massey Ferguson 65, 85, Super 90, and 35 New Grove Wagons $145.00 Anti-Freeze $1.39 per gal. in your own container 20” Disc Blades $4.25 Gravity Boxes New and Used Chain Saws Order your baler twine now pay next spring Holstein Springing Heifers Large Selection of Manure Spreaders 717-866-2138 SPECIALS Soil Absorbs Phosphorus Readily, Renovates Water University Park Fine-tex- onto virtually all the rest of the tured soils have the ability to phosphorus or ™ A The Penn State research has phorus from sewage effluent „ , ~ , , , , than would be added in 100 found that water and P lant nu ‘ years if two inches of effluent trients from municipal sewage were applied weekly. This was treatment plants, which cause announced recently by Dr. pollution problems when fed in- Louis T. Kardos of The Penn- to streams or lakes, can be uti sylvania State University daring Hzed in small or medium sized annual meetings of the Ameri- communities by irrigating near can Society of Agronomy in hy farm and forest land with the New Orleans, La. chlorinated effluent. Dr. Kardos said the adsorp- The experiments determined tiv& or holding capacity of fine- that only 129 acres of land ly divided inorganic clay par- would be needed to utilize the tides in the upper 5 feet of fine- one million gallons of waste textured Hagerstown soil water produced daily in a com could hold onto 20,000 pounds munity of 10,000 persons. This of phosphorus at one experi- would be applied with an irri mental site at Penn State. gation system putting on two This adsorptive or holding inches of effluent weekly, capacity of these clay particles Dr. Eardos and associates be becomes a safety valve in ren- lieve such use of effluent may ovating sewage effluent, he ex- become a hidden resource for plained While plant roots be- communities. The renovated come a “living filter” in taking water trickles down to the up as much as 39 per cent of ground water reservoir and the phosphorus in sewage ef- thence to wells, springs, and fluent, the clay particles hold streams. Such water easily we recommend mjr duMont K.ARMEX Dim ON WEED KILLER for weed control in alfalfa • ECONOMICAL • LONG LASTING • EFFECTIVE • EASY-TO-USE SEE US TODAYI msiom Smoketown, Pa. Phone 397-3539 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, November 30,1968 # £ounty FFA N (Contmued from Page 1) Paul Eekman, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Eekman, Strasburg Rl, was elected by the present County officers and will be in stalled at the January meeting. The new president-elect has corn, tobacco, sheep, fattening hogs, 3 dairy animals and 4 sows as projects. He is interest ed in Forestry, and has planted 1000 trees on his family’s farm. He succeeds Linford Martin, East Earl Rl. Garden Spot High School as the County Chapter head. Other officers are: Lester Bowman, vice president, Garden Spot; Paul Clark, secretary, Pe quea Valley; Jeff Pfautz, trea surer, Ephrata; Burnell Buch en, reportei, Manheim; Ken Weaver, sentinel, Warwick; Thomas Aaron, chaplain, So lanco; Carl Erb, corresponding secretary. Penn Manor; Michael Baum, parliamentarian, Eliza bethtown meets standards for potable water as set by the U.S Public Health Service. In four years of drought at State College, hay yields in creased by 2 to 3’ tons per acre where 1 or 2 inches of waste water were applied weekly. Corn yields increased by 30 to 50 bushels per acre in conven tional rows 38 inches apart. Such benefits could help to pay costs of installing an irrigation system. Since any effluent disposal system must operate through out the year, the system in northern climates must rely more on the adsorptive capacity of the soil than on the “living filter” take-up of plant nutri ents. Forested areas fit into the system by providing better win ter infiltration conditions than cropland and also larger phos phorus adsorptive capacities under the acid conditions asso ciated with forest soils. Dr. Kardos has been associat ed with the sewage effluent ex permiments at Penn State since they were begun in 1962. Re cently he was appointed coor dinator of the Waste Water Renovation and Conservation Research Project at the Uni versity. It’s the fellow who arrives an hour late who wants to talk when everybody else is ready to adjourn. 9