—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 10, 1973 8 PSU Slates Dairy Meet Speakers and topics have been announced for a dairy herd management conference scheduled to begin at 1:00 p.m., Tuesday, February 27, at Penn State’s J.O. Keller Conference Center, and end at noon the following day. Chairman for the conference is Donald Ace of the university’s dairy science extension office. Anyone interested in attending should contact N. Alan Bair at the Lancaster County Farm and Home Center by February 16. There will be a registration fee of $l2 per person. The conference program follows. Tuesday, February 27,1973 11 00 a m. - Registration, Lobby, J.O. Keller Conference Center TOO p.m. - Welcome Pa, ’72 Apple Output Down Apple production in Penn sylvania in 1972 dipped drastically from the previous year because of poor weather conditions, notably Hurricane Agnes floods in June. According to the Pennsylvania Crop Reporting Service, apple production for the com monwealth totaled 400 million pounds in 1972, a decrease of 140 million pounds from the previous year’s production total of 540 million pounds. York Imperial, the com monwealth’s leading apple variety, was down 26 percent from last year. A production estimate of 98 mil’>on pounds accounts for over 24 percent of the total state apple crop. Pennsylvania slipped to second 1:15 - Legislation and Public Relations of Farm Waste Handling - George Wolff, Farmer and Public Relations Consultant, Lebanon, Penn sylvania 2:00 - Think Positive When You Think Manure - Rodney Martin, Director, Farm Systems Research, Agway, Inc. 3:00 - Milk Break plus coffee and sweet things 3:30 - Waste Handling Systems That Can Work - Dairyman Panel Moderator: Donald Ace, Dairy Science Extension Jay Frey, Turkey Hill Farm, Lancaster County Dairyman Benjamin Reynolds, Green Valley Farm, Chester County place this season in the production of \ork Imperials. The Virginia crop of 99 million pounds accounted for 36 percent of the U.S. total with Penn sylvania a close second at 35 percent of the total. Windows Can Leak Cold Air If your windows are leaking cold air, up to 30 percent of your family’s beating bill is being caused by warm air leakage or cold air infiltration. To seal out the howling wind, Extension specialists at The Pennsylvania State University, suggest you get storm windows or double-pane insulating glass. Or use weather stripping at movable joints and caulk the frames of all windows and doors. Dairyman Paul Landis, Pau-Layn Acres, Montour County Dairyman John Rodgers, Plum Bottom Farm, Mifflin County Dairyman 5:00 - Dinner Hour Pick and Choose, It’s on You 7:30 - The Challenges and Op portunities Facing Milk Marketing Cooperatives Glenn Lake, President, National Milk Producers Federation 8:30 - Protect the the Quality of Your Product - Jane Alexander, Deputy Secretary of Agriculture Wednesday, February 28 8:30 - Summary of Calf Loss Survey - Donald Ace, Dairy Science Extension 8:40 - The Right Age and Weight at First Freshening - Harvey Shaffer, Dairy Science Ex tension 9:00 - Manage to Prevent Calf Losses- Russell Willoughby, Professor of Medicine, On tario Veterinary College 10:00 - Milk Break plus coffee and sweet things 10:30 - Calf and Heifer Management - Dairyman Panel Moderator: Joe Taylor, Head, Dairy Science Extension Roy Coleman, Susquehanna County Dairyman Clair Smith, Vaucluse Farms, Rhode Island Leo Rutter, York County Dairyman 12:00 - Adjourn Wayne Cares. Give your pigs the best start they can get with the Wayne Tail Curler family of feeds... And, the Wormer Is Free! Now you can plan on each ton of Wayne Tail Curler producing 40 head of 50-lb. pigs. And we’ll give you enough wormer to treat those pigs—Free—with every ton you purchase. Offer good until April 30,1973 See us now. ROHRER’S MILL R.D.I, Ronks JE'MAR FARM SUPPLYING. Lawn—Ph: 964-3444 H. JACOB HOOBER Intercourse, Pa. HAROLD H. GOOD Terre Hill GRUBB SUPPLY CO. Elizabethtown CUSTOM BUTCHERING Hogs Processed the old fashioned way. Sausage, pudding, scrapple. Hams and Bacon cured. Beef cut, wrapped and frozen. Dried beef and bologna. WE ALSO SPECIALIZE IN U.S.D.A. GRADED SIDES AND QUARTERS. CALL PAUL A. HESS 464-3711 or 464-3127 APPLY LIME ON FROZEN GROUND Don’t hesitate to apply lime, even if the ground is frozen. The freezing and thawing action of Winter helps disseminate the lime, assuring you a properly balanced soil, ready for Spring plowing. And remember, liming pays in extra bushels and tons of crops and forage. MARTIN’S LIMESTONE Blue Ball, Pa. 354-4125 E. SAUDER & SONS R.D.I, East Earl HERSHEY BROS, Reinholds WHITE OAK MILL R.D.4, Manheim MOUNTVILLE FEED SERVICE R.D.2, Columbia DUTCHMAN PEED MILLS. INC. R-D.l, Stevens Gap, Pa. 442-4148 STEVENS PEED MILL, INC. Stevens, Pa PARADISE SUPPLY Paradise H.M. STAUFFER & SONS, INC. Witmer FOWL’S FEED SERVICE R.D.2, Peach Bottom }K f-vCj