8 MONEYMAKING ALFALFAS • DuPuit • Vernal • Buffalo • Ranger 8 MONEYMAKING CLOVERS • Certified Pennscott # Mammoth • Select Pennscott • Alsike • Penna. Medium Red • Yellow Sweet • Midwest Medium Red • Tall Sweet Fresh seed mixed and Inoculated (FREE) Save with REIST’S SEEDS REIST SEED COMPANY Finest Quality Seeds (Since 1925) Mount Joy, Pa For goml production next lactation, FEED PURINA DAIRY CONDITIONER As a dairyman, you know that good milk production doesn’t just happen. It’s something you plan for by establishing a herd with the genetic potential for good production, then managing and feeding your cows so they’ll produce up to their bred-in ability. Many successful local dairymen also plan for good pro duction with a proven program of dry cow feeding. They need Purina Dairy Conditioner, a research proven ration to help give dry cows body condition they need for good production after they freshen. Purina Dairy Conditioner is an extra-palatable 12 Vz percent protein ration. It’s fortified with vitamins A and D plus extra phosphorus to help guard against milk fever. Purina Dairy Conditioner is low-cost, too, because the amounts you feed depend on your cows’ condition and on the quality of the roughages you feed. For example, a cow dried off in good condition being fed high-quality roughages would require less Dairy Conditioner than a cow in only fair condition being fed fair quality roughages. Drop in soon and get your free copy of the Purina Dry Cow Program folder. We’ll be glad to show you how Purina Dairy Conditioner can help you prepare your dry cows for good pro duction next lactation. John J. Hess, ll# Inc. Ph: 442-4632 Paradise Ira. B. Landis Ph: 394-7912 1012 Creek Hill Rd., Lane. West Willow Formers Assn., Inc. Ph: 464-3431 West Willow • Cayuga '• Haymor • Northwest Common • Promor Ph. 653-4121 John B. Kurtz Ph: 354-9251 R. D. 3, Ephrata James High & Sons Ph: 354-0301 Gordonville Wenger's Feed Mill Inc. Ph: 367-1195 Rheems State Vegetable Production Up, Processed Tomatoes Set Record The combined production in Pennsylvania of five vegetables for the fresh market and eight for processing is estimated at 290,800 tons for 1970, up six per cent from last year, but 11 per cent below 1968. The fresh market harvest was up three per cent from a yeai ago. The five fresh market vege tables are snap beans, cabbage, sweet corn, tomatoes and straw berries. The processor’s production was seven per cent above a year ago, but 17 per cent below the big 1968 crop, which was the largest in 10 years The process ing vegetables are snap beans, sweet corn, tomatoes, lima beans, cabbage, cucumbers, peas and spinach. The most prominent yield change was that of tomatoes for processing, up from the 1969 yield of 15 0 tons to a record 19 87 tons this year. This is the highest yield on record, and the third highest yield in the Nation this year with only Cali fornia and Ohio recording high er yields. The 1970 record yield surpasses the previous record yield of 17.7 tons in 1968. Fresh market growers receiv ed $lO 2 million for their crops this year, up slightly from the $lO 1 million received last year Value at the processing plant door of the production for pro cessing was 8 8 million or six per cent above a year earlier. The early growing season for most of the Commonwealth was mild and wet, causing some planting and field work to be delayed; however, growing con ditions were generally favor able with rainfall near to slight ly above normal over most of the State. Cloudy and rainy weather predominated during July and Strength, Performance, Dependability. You've got’em all with VAN DALE’S NEW TRAVELING BUNK FEEDER. Van Dale’s SCF-1400 is the traveling j ~ “1 feeder to put you on the track to fast- J /'HIED A A i ef, more profitable operations. Auto- J vALtIJ Ifl. ! matically, it delivers up to 40 tons of | J silage per hour to bunks on a single { ESvuER I chain, continuous “shuttle” service. | II LllUhll I Feeder trough chain is No. 67 pm- I - - - tie (12,500 lb. strength) and drive j chain is C-550 steel (average top j strength of 10,000 lbs.). Interlocking, | snap-together galvanized metal com- | ponents reduce erection time as j much as 50%. Suspended or floor- I mounted, rails are mounted with Van | Dale’s exclusive clip-on brackets to } provide extra-rigid support. Unit { adapts to any feeding need in-barn { ■|| or out-of-doors. ‘ ; I Lancaster Farming, Saturday, January 2,1971 — the early part of August with vesting operations The growing adequate soil moisture furthei- season was extremely long with mg crop development. The state-wide frost occurring on weather toward the last part of the morning of November IS, August and during September almost one month later than was generally favorable for har- last year Glen E. Morrow (right) of Bethesda, Md., shows off his prize registered Holstein cow, Reinharts Arthur-Farms Ballad, to three Maryland guests during ceremonies in the cow’s honor recently at Glen-Lu-Knoll farm near Frederick, Md. The dairy cow boosters are, left to right; Dr. Ralph E. Hodgson, director of the animal science division at the U. S. Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural Research Ser vice experiment station near Beltsville; Dr. Richard F. Davis, head of the Department of Dairy Science at the Uni versity of Maryland, and Susan A. Fry of Cecilton, state dairy princess. Morrow and Dr. Hodgson grew up together on neighboring Wisconsin dairy farms near Mazomanie (Dane county). Morrow’s cow completed a 365-day world’s production record Dec. 7 for twice-daily milking, with 40, 980 pounds of milk testing 3.2 per cent butterfat. Ballad be gan her official test as a five-year-old. R. D. 1 Drumore Center Quarryville, Pa. Phone 548-2116 ■ V«iEjtti|VLE 19