Horse Disease Hits Mexico and The USDA has declared a threatening the nation’s horse national emergency that is industry following a outbreak PLANT COYER CROPS AND IMPROVE YOUR CROP LAND ORGANIC MATTER IS THE LIVE ELOOD OF THE SOIL • Annual Rye Grass • Monarch Hybrid Sudan • Field Brome Grass Grass • Yellow Sweet Clover * Wabash Soybeans • Winter Vetch Wayne Soybeans • Dwarf Essex Rape -.on. ™ I DeKalbSudax * Balboßs ' e WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF INSECTICIDES FUNGICIDES - WEEDKILLERS ORTHO UNIPEL FERTILIZERS iiniMMiaii SmoketoWK, Pa. 397-3539 ATTENTION CRAIN GROWERS DUAL See a Brock Grain Drying System in Operation on Our Own Form. R. D. 1, Willow Street BROCK PURPOSE DRAIN BINS -rC.tStz *•" *** T<:- . • I**-** ' •*v., '*'*'*’*’■'*'-&-Z: ttaast 'm\ I i iKHB } 1.K.K.'.. Cgl l n. '■■'** foftWKgg:. »».». »-»«»| For Grain Storage and Drying 48 Models 18 to 40 Foot Diameter Bins Capacity From 2200 to 40000 Bushels WE SELL, SERVICE AND INSTALL E. M. HERR EQUIPMENT, INC. of a disease in Mexico and Tex as. But local sources indicate the disease does not affect Pennsyl vania at this time and likely will not reach this area. To help seal off spread of the disease, transportation of horses from five states, New Mexico, Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas has been banned. Abe Diffenbach, New Holland Stables sales manager, said the four states around Texas have not actually encountered the disease but are being used as a buffer zone from Texas. Diffenbach said only one load of horses from lowa has been turned away from the New Hol land Horse auction as result of the disease scare. This was a load which had no tempera ture chart and Diffenbach indi cated he expects the animals back with this situation correct ed soon. Diffenbach also noted that there was a similar scare in volving the Eastern-Western sleeping sickness disease about four years ago. The same vac cine used then is being used now to fight the current out break but Diffenbach indicated he doesn’t think the vaccine is as effective as before. Meanwhile, the USDA report- >■ >' v i \T Texas; Not Expected Locally ed last week that more than 152,000 horses have already been vaccinated in Texas and that sufficient vaccine is being supplied to Texas to meet the emergency. The USDA also in dicated the vaccine will be made available in areas outside Texas, if deemed necessary. USDA f s Agricultural Re search Service has assigned veterinarians in states adjoin ing Texas to assist in providing surveillance for the disease in outlying areas. The disease is reported being spread by insects, particularly mosquitoes, and the U.S. Air Force is applying the insecti cide Malathion for control of mosquitoes. While the rapid spread of the disease has made it difficult to keep up with ac curate figures on the toll, USDA reported last week that 800 horses are already dead in Texas, with more than 1,000 others possibly infected. The entire state of Texas is under federal quarantine, which requires that all horses intended to he moved from the state must be accompanied by a health and vaccination certi ficate showing that each in dividually identified animal has been vaccinated at least 14 days before its movement from the 717-464-3321 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 31,1971 state. The USDA said last week that one of the difficulties in the control of the disease is the uncertainty regarding the vac cine. Sufficient laboratory studies have not been complet ed to determine whether the vaccine can spread the disease and whether or not the vaccine itself can cause illness in the horse. For these reasons the federal government has been cautious in committing the use of the vaccine in areas where the disease has not been known to exist, it was explained. In declaring an emergency in connection with the disease, Clifford Hardin, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture, authorized “the transfer from other appropria tions or funds available to the agencies and corporations of the Department such sums as may be necessary for all proper purposes ... to control and era dicate the disease wherever found.” The disease itself is known as Venezuelan eqquine encephalo myelitis (VEE). Maryland State Veterinarian Dr. T. A. Ladson said the Venezuelan disease may be transmitted directly among both humans and horses and for this reason is difficult to control. He described it as a greater hazard to the horse in dustry than the past Eastern and Western varieties of the disease. He also said that early diag nosis is important and he urged anyone having any knowledge of a sickness similar to sleep ing sickness in horses to contact an animal health office or veterinarian immediately. He said horse owners should keep a close eye on their ani mals, especially from now through November, and report any suspected illness quickly. Elsewhere Garrett Redmond, vice president of Fireman’s Fund American Insurance Com panies in San Francisco, assur ed horse owners in the South west that if horses die as a re sult of innoculation of vaccine their insurance policy will pay the loss. “We are taking the position that it is better to use the vaccine, even though its ef fects on horses is not entirely known, than to do nothing and just let the horses die,” he ex plained. He said his company is not cancelling any policies. On new and renewal policies in the five quarantined states, coverage for the disease is being excluded, however He said the exclusion does not apply to existing poli cies and would be lifted on new policies when the epidemic passes. PROTECT YOUR FARM WITH A PINCOR PTO TRACTOR DRIVEN ALTERNATOR I 50,000 watts surfe capacity ► 10,000 watts continuous duty t Slow speed—l Boo RPM operation I Cool runninf triple chain drive transmission t Heavy duty motor startinc ► Close voltaic refutation I Meets NEMA codes I Heavy duty construction * Induction hardened Input shaft » Rain proof construction I Completely wired control box ► Three phase available SEE IT AT... —...— HAVERSTICK BROS. 2111 Stone Mill Rd. Lancaster, Pa. 17603 Ph. (717) 392-5722 11