New 9 H.P. Briggs & Stratton Engine with clutch, also 4 H.P. with reduction gears. Have in stock new IVz H.P. and VP also 8 & 10 H.P. Cast Iron Engines. Used 6 H.P. B & S with reduction gear Used VE4 Wisconsin with clutch. Allis Chalmers Hoy Conditioner Like New XL Home-Lite Skill Quaker State Motor Oil 6000 Used Chicken Cages Like New JOHN I LAPP Small Engine Service R. D. 1, Gordonville, Pa. Agway " —' your oil heating system a new heart for only^^~*^ You’re burning up money every winter if your oil burner won’t hold its tune, needs constant repairs, frequent service. For only $169.95 plus tax Agway's ex pert servicemen can install a new Model 40J burner, including a new primary control in just a couple of hours. And this is a quality burner that’s generous with heat and miserly with fuel. It quickly pays for itself with what it saves you on fuel, repairs, service calls. Call Agway today and modernize with a new oil burner package. You’ll bring down the cost of winter. Call Agway Petroleum today. And bring down the cost of winter. AGWAY PETROLEUM CORP. (AGWAY) Dillerville Rd., Lancaster Ph, 717-397-4954 Make move save! Drive a new or used John Deere Tractor all fall and winter... no finance charges until March 1, 1972 We’ve sharpened our pencils, and our terms are better, too. Effective im mediately no finance charges until March 1, 1972 on the tractor of your choice . . . any model, any horsepower size . . . new or used equipment. Get today’s prices, today’s trade-in allowances. Make your move here . . . right now! Stop in for moneysaving details! Landis Bros. Inc. f Shotzberger's Lancaster 393-3906 Elm 665-2141 M. S. Yearsley & Sons A. B. C. Groff, Inc. Wenger Implement, Inc. West Chester 696-2990 New Holland 354r4191 The Buck 284-4141 Centerville Road ~ v .? 'S s 2v ~ - <ss£# •.^•^ *l6 AFB Says Rising Wages Speeds Mechanization The federal minimum wage for farm workers is hastening farm mechanization, according to a story in the September issue of Nation’s Agriculture, official monthly publication of the American Farm Bureau Federa tion. C. M. Wilson, a contributing editor to Nation’s Agriculture, reports that a bill toy New Jer . sey’s Senator Harrison Williams would increase the federal mini mum wage to $2.25 per hour for farm workers and also require farmers to pay time and a half for more than 40 hours a week. ' To counteract higher produc tion costs, many farm operators are switching to mechanization. In Salem County, N.J., Wilson writes, 20 new mechanical tomato pickers are operating this sum mer and another 15 are at work in adjoining counties of Cum berland and Gloucester. In Yakima Valley in Washing ton state, over 50 per cent of all processing grapes were picked by hand last year. This year Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 28,1971 —23 Dr. Nelson Is Honored Richard R. Nelson, Penn State University professor of plant pathology, has been elected a Fellow of the American Phyto pathological Society. Dr. Nelson was cited for outstanding con tributions to the science of plant pathology during the Society’s 63rd annual meeting in Phil adelphia August 18. A member of the Penn State faculty since 1966, Dr. Nelson ■has become nationally known for his experiments with genetics and the evolution of plant patho gens. He is equally well known in the field of plant pathology for studies of disease resistance in plants, experiments with corn diseases, and epidemics of plant diseases. Dr. Nelson and associates re ceived recently a grant of $150,- there are 22 machines in opera tion A similar development has occurred in the Great Lakes grape area of New York, Penn sylvania, Ohio and Michigan. ■ * S 000 for research on corn blight. The grant came from the Agri cultural Research Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Editor of an upcoming book entitled “Breeding Plants for Disease Resistance,” he is the author of 150 scientific papers and reports in technical journals. The book will be published by The Pennsylvania State Univer sity Press. He has traveled and lectured in Scotland, England, Holland, France, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, Italy, Spain, Greece, Mexico, Guatemala, and Alaska. At Penn State his responsibilities include those of graduate school teacher and advisor. Dr. Nelson served as plant pathologist with the U.S. Depart ment of Agriculture in Raleigh, N.C., before coming to Penn State. He served as a Rockefel ler Foundation Research Fellow at the University of Minnesota from 1953 to 1955 His graduate degrees were both conferred by the University of Minnesota.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers