MUNCY CHIEF HYBRID SEEDS LANCASTER SILOS Starline Labor Savers Feed Lot Construction SALES & SERVICE J. Samuel Sherer Mt. Joy R. 2 Phone 717-653-5207 or 717-653-5208 | JAMESw""~| | All-Season Ventilation | 5 I I I i 1 Controls Environment Automatically I M. E. SNAVELY k South Cedar St, Litltz, Pa. 17543 Ph. 626-814/ FARMER - MR. WHO? - Put the first trade marked feed m 100 lbs. bags? - Made scientifically formulated feed since 1902? - Was the first in the industry to have a cereal chem lab? - Employes chemists, nutritionists, veterinarians and engineers for your benefit? - Has 30 research centers m order'to make better feeds for you ? Puts 10 per cent of their ora-tax earnings into research for you? - Has an 820 acre farm to raise livestock for "on the farm” testing? - Flushes their equipment after each type of feed, to prevent contamination? THE TEAM OF HALES AMD HUNTER CO. AND CARGILL INC., THAT'S WHO. WOULDN’T YOU LIKE TO BE ON A TEAM LIKE THAT? Wouldn’t you like to be on a team like that? JK| ELMER M. SHREINER swce.i«7» USDA Issues The U.S. Department of Agriculture has issued results of a study on “Prices and Con sumption of Dairy Products with Price Supports and Milk Or ders.” USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service said the study was made to portray the prices, price relationships and price structures that developed under Complete Intake-Exhaust System Draft-Free Conditions Thermostat and Time Controls Trading as Good’s Feed Mill Specializing in DAIRY & HOG FEEDS New Providence, Pa Phone 786-2500 Product milk pricing programs, as well as the reactions of consumers as measured by milk consumption. Some important considerations covered by the study are the impact, over a period of more than 20 years, of the milk order and price support programs on: —Retail prices of milk and dairy products relative to other foods. —Competition between fluid milk products and manufactured products such as nonfat dry milk and dry milk mixes and the effect on fluid consumption. MORE POWER TO YOU... Report on Dairy Prices and Consumption Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 26,1972 —Changes in consumption of butterfat and solids-no-fat in various milk products. —Changes in the margin of the price for bottling milk over that of milk for manufacturing. —Changes in relative price and value of butterfat and solids-no fat in milk. AMS officials said the report will be helpful to handlers who process and distribute milk and dairy products, and to dairy farmers and their cooperatives, in understanding the impact of Pa. Tobacco Crop Pennsylvania appears headed for the smallest harvest of tobacco in 38 years. Estimates by the Crop Reporting Service on August 1, indicated that production this year would be 26,400,000 pounds. The acreage devoted to tobacco is the lowest in nearly 100 years. The decline is not associated with the cigarette-cancer link as most of the tobacco grown in the Commonwealth Pennsylvania seedleaf or Type No 41 is utilized in the manufacture of cigars. In fact, production of all types of tobacco grown in the U.S. is being forecast at up 13,000,000 pounds from last year the price support and milk order programs on the dairy economy. The report contains basic in formation for further study of how present milk pricing systems can be improved. Single copies of “Prices and Consumption of Dairy Products with Price Supports and Milk Orders,” AER 226, may be ob tained by postcard request from the Office of Information, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C. 20250. Please include your zipcode. Smallest Since '3B Tobacco growing has been on the decline in Pennsylvania since it peaked at 60,000,000 pounds in 1962 Since that time, acreage has decreased almost annually. This year’s crop was further distressed as cold, wet weather delayed transplanting until the late June floods stopped all operations. Although cigarette con sumption continues to grow m spite of the surgeon general’s warning, cigar smoking appears to be on the wane even though it has been given a relatively clean bill of health $ $ A Swift Swimmer The otter is the fastest freshwater mammal in North America. It cruises at six miles an hour but can go much faster if need be. It can swim a quarter-mile under water and remain sub merged for four minutes sustain top production with the BABCOCK B-300 Keeping production up,..costs down... Is the prof It key in poultry operations. And more and more records on commercial flocks of Babcock B-300's... , ‘The Busi nessman’s Bird”...show sus tained production of top quality eggs..,qtten with an additional 20 to 30 eggs per bird housed over other strains. Come in... look at the records and the B-300 .. .“The Businessman’s Bird”. BABCOCK FARMS, INC Telephone (717) 626-8561) 17