READ LANCASTER FARMING FOR FULL MARKET REPORTS LANCO BEDDING FOR POULTRY & LIVESTOCK WOOD SHAVINGS & PEANUT HULLS Order your peanut hulls now for sure delivery! Expect shipments to start Sept. 27 CALL 299-3541 About all you can say about the Purina Calf Growing Program * it leaves you all your milk to sell * it grows heifers fast * it gets them ready to breed early But then, that says a lot. Purina’s six-month Calf Growing Pro gram combines fortified and medicated Purina Nursing Chow®, high-energy Calf Startena®and Purina Calf Growena® into a program geared strictly to fast, efficient growth. Heifers grow faster and reach breeding weight earlier. In fact, you can have your John J. Hess, 11, Inc. Ph; 4424632 Paradise West Willow Formers Assn., Inc. Ph: 464-3431 West Willow NEED SOMETHING NEW IN FRONT OF YOUR LICENSE PLATE? Member F D I C Ira B. Landis Ph: 394-7912 1912 Creek Hill Rd., Lane. John B. Kurtz Ph: 354-9251 R. D. 3, Ephrata Go Modern with a ‘folendly.'Tinit AUTO LOAN Whether you choose a compact or a limousine, buy it with a convenient "economy” loan from the First Na tional Bank of Strasburg. Ask at the Friendly First about a financing plan tailored to your budget. You should come out miles ahead. Hka First < Hciianot (B&nfc StnoAbun^ STRASBURG EAST KING STREET, WILLOW STREET 687-7617 LANCASTER 464-3421 397-4733 Federal agricultural quarantine and plant pest control activities were consolidated Sept. 3, into a single, cohesive unit of the. U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS). The merger joins together the former Plant Protection Division heifers in the milking barn—producing— months ahead of many other heifers. And that means you can sell all your milk. Want the details? Stop by our Checker board store. Let us show you what the Purina Calf Program can do for you— and your heifers. James High & Sons Ph: 354-0301 GordonviUe USDA Merges Pest Control And Quarantine Functions 15... Wenger's Feed Mill Inc. Ph: 367-1195 Eheems Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 16,1972 and the Agricultural Quarantine Division and the Agricultural Quarantine Division of APHIS into a single Plant Protection and Quarantine Program under Deputy Administrator Leo G.K. Iverson. The change, which has been in the planning stage for some months according to APHIS Administrator Dr. Francis J. Mulhem, “will greatly improve our ability to marshall manpower and resources when and where they are needed to combat the introduction and spread of agricultural pests and diseases. As a result, we will be able to make more effective use of our total staff of quarantine in spectors at ports-of-entry and plant protection specialists located throughout the U.S.” Functions of the newly con solidated unit include; - Cooperative programs with the 50 States, Mexico, and Canada for the control and eradication of such plant pests as: gypsy moths, fire ants, pink bollworms, grasshoppers, etc.; - Monitoring the impact of such pest control programs on the environment; - Promoting safe and effective use of pesticides; - Preventing the importation and exportation of pests and diseases that are injurious to plants and animals; - Preventing the transportation and spread of “hitchhiking” pests in interstate commerce; and, - Certifying plants and plant products for export when they meet the requirements of im porting countries. Deputy Administrator Iverson said that the newly consolidated headquarters staff located at Hyattsville, Md., has been converted into * a program Development and Planning Staff headed by Donald R Shepherd. Field operation of the two former divisions have also been con solidated, with new regional headquarters located at Moorestown, N.J. (Northeastern Region); Gulfport, Miss. (Southeastern Region); Brownsville, Tex. (Southwestern Region), and Oakland, Calif. (Western Region). The new alignment will not affect the current location and staffing of agricultural quarantine inspection at ports-of entry, or the plant protection State offices. Likewise, no change is being made in the Mexico Region of the plant protection activities, Iverson explained. Greenhouse Training Program Scheduled The Penn State Cooperative Extension Service has announced that it will conduct a training program for greenhouse em ployees and formen. The program will be conducted one day each week for five weeks at the Penn State Graduate Center, Gulph and Henderson Roads, King of Prussia. The course will cost $2O. Classes will start at 9 00 a.m. and end at 3:00 p.m. Subjects to be covered and the dates are; Sept. 27, plants and their growth; Oct. 4, principles of fertilization; Oct. 11, fertilizer practices; Oct. 18, plant propagation; Oct. 25, greenhouse structures. Closing date for registration is September 22. Any greenhouse employee who wants to register can do so by sending a check for $2O (payable to Bucks County Cooperative Extension Service) to James K. Rathmell, Jr., Floriculture & Nursery Agent, 400 Markely St., Norristown, Pa 19401. ' w , s ' 11