Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, April 04, 1970, Image 11

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    I
Trace Minerals May Be
Through plant breeding and
fertilization, crop yields have
increased enormously for sever
al decades.
The more or less standard
NPK fertilizers, heavily applied,
stimulate rapid growth and pro
duction of crops that pump up
through the root system not
merely the three commercial
plant food elements, but also
other mineral elements includ
ing trace minerals with which
we are concerned, according to
Dr. Gustav Bohstedt, of the
University of Wisconsin.
If these minerals are not re
placed in time, the soil will be
come more and more depleted.
The New Hampshire test
some years ago is a case in
point Through successive NPK
fertilization pastui es finally
were found to have only about
half of the cobalt necessary to
satisfy the requirement of dany
cattle.
Should cobalt then be added
to a fertilizer application as a
New Zealand friend suggested
at one time? Not unless cobalt
were much' cheaper than it is
in our country, Dr Bohstedt
said. Added to the feed of cat
tle one can get by with about
1/15 of the cost necessary to
properly fortify the pasture
grass
Again and again in the litera
□am
winning
for corn
The combination of Du Pont "Lorox" plus Atrazme gives you
the best annual weed and grass control for corn . . . while
minimizing the carry-over problem. "Lorox" is known for its
favorable rate of disappearance from the soil as well as for its
superior ability to control a wide range of weeds and grasses.
Atrazine is known for the manner in which it is tolerated by corn.
Mix them yourself or buy a ready-mixed formulation of the
two look for the bag containing linuron.
CALL YOUR AGWAY SALESMAN
ture comments arc made that
the level of copper, manganese
and zinc have during the years
declined in corn and other
Dog Officers
Check Homes
The ding-dong from your
doorbell may not be a cosmetic
representative calling It could
be your dog law enforcement
officer.
If it is, he’s calling to see if
you’ve purchased a 1970 license
for youi pooch
T Luke Toomey, director of
the Pennsylvania Department of
Agriculture’s Buieau of Dog
Law Enfoi cement, said he has
instructed dog law officers to
begin a statewide house-to
house canvass
Toomey said the dog law offi
cers will be in unifoi m and will
carry credentials He said they
will query tenants on whether
their dogs have been licensed
“We usually know if a person
owns a dog,” Toomey said “The
next door neighboi volunteers
this information, especially if a
dog has been running loose and
annoying neighbors ”
January 15 was the deadline
for licensing dogs The state’s
dog law provides fines ranging
combination
weed control...
grain, no doubt for the above in
dicated reason
In one instance an article
stated that copper has declined
70 per cent in corn grown in
the midwestern corn belt.
The late Frank B. Morrison
in his text and reference book
FEEDS AND FEEDING, at the
beginning authored by Dean W.
A. Henry, gives analyses of the
major feed crops for several
decades.
Taking the editions of 1913
and 1956. the iron content as
reported in appendix tables of
the book declined 75 per cent in
corn, 62 per cent in barley, 74
per cent in oats and 54 per cent
in timothy hay
Heniy and Morrison used
many feed analyses from dif
ferent parts of the country in
an effort to obtain as depend
able figures as possible so that
the mass of data might have
some statistical significance
The 43 year interval does not
cover analyses of the same
crops grown on the same land
at the beginning and end of the
period, nor with all conditions
the same at the start and the
from $lO to $3OO for owners of
unlicensed dogs
In most of the state licenses
cost $l2O for males and $2 20
for females.
• • * .J
Lancaster Farming. Saturday, April 4.1970
end But the differences in
analyses arc suggestive. They
may very well apply to other
trace minerals.
The reports from various
quarters lend substance to the
recommendations that in view
of a general depletion of trace
minerals whether in special pre
mixes or by way of trace mm
eralized salt is low. So, with
more and more areas of the
country found trace mineral cle
.
't
See The Genuine
MECHANICAL
TRANSPLANTER
HORSE DRAWN OR TRACTOR MODELS
With All The Features The Farmer
Wants and Buys
LESTER A. SINGER
Ronks, Pa.
Short
ficicnt. it is well to invest in
this low-cost insurance for the
protection of our livestock.
Why combine phosphates and
salt for free access feeding?
Because most phosphates, in
cluding bone meal, are unpala
table by themselves. But when,
at Utah, a mixture was made up
of salt and bone meal, half and
half, the cattle are two to three
times as much bone meal as
when no salt was added
* w vs V
Sold and Serviced By
Phone Strasburg 687-6712
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