READ LANCASTER FARMING FOR FULL MARKET REPORTS PUBLIC SALE OF FARM EQUIPMENT. IHDRS. MARCH 22, 1973 at 1:00 Located along Brenneman Road, Lane. R.D. 6 Approx. 3 miles south of Lancaster on Route 222. Turn west at Ford Tractor on Millwood Rd. TUrn right on Brenneman to sale. 8 tons straw. 5 tons hay. B. John Deere tractor. 101 John Deere single row corn picker. Ford baler with Wisconsin engine David Bradley flat bed wagon with McCuroy grain bin. Ford equip: 2 row corn planter, 2 bottom 12" & 14” plows, 3 p.h. harrow, 24 disc 3 p.h., manure loader. Black Hawk 2 row corn planter, Long 30' elevator flat bed wagon, 28 & 24 discs. 3 p.h. spring & 2 sec. Peg harrows. 13 disc grain drill, New Idea manure spreader, 3 p.h. spreader, side delivery rake, single row tobacco planter & potato planter, roller, walking dirt scraper, fodder chopper, two 28” tractor tires, 1500 tobacco lath, baling box, corn shelter, Planter Jr. Garden tractor, lawn mowers, cement mixer, mud box, metal wheel barrow, metal stakes, 12' wooden gate, elec, fencers, milk can, stove, Ig. tent, bag wagon, step ladder, barn tools, rope, etc. Other farm articles. Not responsible for accidents day of sate. SALE BY MR. & MRS. RAYMOND STEVENS HOWARD-SHAUB, AUCTIONEER PUBLIC AUCTION VALLEY VIEW FARM COMPLETE HERD DISPERSAL 100 HEAD HIGH GRADE HOLSTEIN COWS The undersigned, discontinuing dairy farming, will sell the dairy cattle on the farm located on Long Green Pike in Baldwin. Baltimore County, Md. Via U.S. Rt. 1 at Kingsville, Md., take Sunshine Ave. west to intersection of Harford Rd. and Fork Rd.; take Fork Road 3 mi. west to Long Green; Ist farm on left. Via Baltimore Beltway, take Cromwell Bridge Rd. Exit; go north 2 mi.; turn left on Glen Arm, Rd.; go to Long Green Pike; turn left 2 mi. to farm. Via Inter-state 83 (York-Harrisburg Exp.) take Rt. 439 (old York Rd.) east to Shawsville; from Shawsville turn right & to the Jarrettsville blinker light; turn right on Baldwin Mill Rd.; go 8 mi. to Baldwin; turn right to Valley View Farm. SIGNS WILL BE POSTED. MONDAY, MARCH 26, 1973 11 A.M. Sharp DAIRY EQUIPMENT: DeLaval pipe line for 60 stanchion barn; 6 DeLavel auto, milkers; complete DeLaval washing system; DeLaval 600 gal. direct expansion bulk tank w-5 horse compressor. DAIRY CATTLE: This herd consists of 100 head of HIGH GRADE HOLSTEIN DAIRY COWS. Twenty-five cows have freshened in the last 60 days; 20 are close springers: the balance are in full flow of milk and re bred for average months. Of those cows milking now, the average is 51 lbs. per cow. All animals will be examined for pregnancy. The best purebred bulls available have been used for breeding. Eighty per-cent of the cows are between 2 and 4 years of age. They are large in size and show quality; udder placements are excellent. This herd isT.B. Accredited, Certified Bangs Free; tested within 30 days of sale-for interstate shipment. Milk weights, breeding dates, freshening dates, etc will be given at sale time. TERMS: CASH OWNER: CA. TC MRS. C. s. BURTON SALES Herdsman & Farm Manager COM. INC. Albert Berg Sa!e Managers Hydes, Md ph()ne; 30j.592.9592 Phone; 301-734-6050 592-8150 AUCTIONEERS’ NOTE: This is one of the finest herds we have ever offered to the public. If you are looking for top Holstein dairy cattle showing quality, size and good udder placement, plan to be with us for this sale. Lunch will be served Pa. Farmers Aid Pennsylvania farmers feed, not only cattle, hogs, and poultry, but everything that flies, swims, runs, or crawls on the farm. And, the 1972 report of the Soil Con servation Service shows that farmer encouragement of wildlife is on the increase ac cording to State Conservationist Benny Martin. Martin reported that the SCS assisted farmers and other landowners improve more than 200,000 acres of land and water areas for the benefit of wildlife. The establishment of food, water, TRY A CLASSIFIED AD! PHONE 626-2191 or 394-3047 C. H. WOLGEMUTH & SONS ANNUAL AIL DAY FARM EQUIPMENT SALE SATURDAY, APRIL 7, 1973 AT 9:30 A.M. LOCATED 4 MILES WEST OF MANHEIM, LANCASTER CO., PA. TRACTORS, FARM EQUIPMENT TRUCKS, HAY, STRAW GOOD USED EQUIP. IN GREAT DEMAND. Anything sold on commission. If you have anything not'suitable for your operation, bring it in to sell and turn to ready cash. If in need of Equipment for a large or smell farm of any description, you’ll find it here ADVERTISING DEADLINE MARCH 30. Contact us early. Items brought in last will be sold last Open to receive goods March 20 till sale day, 8 to 5. NO GOODS received Saturday morning, April 7, except by ap pointment. CLOSED SUNDAYS—SALE RAIN OR SHINE WHEN PLANNING A SALE CONTACT ME FOR RATES AND DATES. FOR INFORMATION CONTACT C. H. Wolgemuth, Sale Manager R.D. No. 2, Manheim, Pa. Phone 717-665-5664 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 17,1973 and cover for wildlife helps in crease populations of pheasants, rabbits, quail and ducks, ac cording to the Service. Martin said that the 200,000 acres of habitat improvement is only a small part of the Penn sylvania farmer’s aid to wildlife. Popular conservation practices as ponds, strip cropping, waterways, and improved grassland also attract and provide food and cover for many kinds of widlife. The conservation measures not only support wildlife but they improve fish Habitats by reducing stream sedimentation. Nutrients insecticides, pesticides, and organic wastes are also held on the land and kept out of the waterways by the Wildlife conservation measures In addition to fishing, other recreational uses of the water ways of the Commonwealth are enhanced by the soil conservation practices farmers apply to the land. Martin added. One-Man Farm (Continued From Page4B) seasonal, providing only half time productive employment. There is, however, an op portunity for the tenant operator to earn a fairly substantial return to management on the technically optimum one-man farm, assuming he can get the capital to equip and operate it. (This study also contains com parable data for one-half and two-man farms, the two-man operation having twice the acreage of the one-man farm.) Tenant v. owner. If these farms were run by debt-free owners instead of tenant operators, the net farm income would show a component in addition to a return to operator’s labor and to his management This would be the return to land capital Income from land capital explains why many debt-free owner-operators are able to make a living con sidering their low return to labor. They may have inherited the land capital or accumulated it through appreciation in land values The models for technically optimum farms were based on conditions in 1972, and hard to predict are the forces that will increase the optimum size in the future Miracle of machines. Today’s technically optimum one-man crop farm is half again as big as it was lust 10 or 15 years ago It grew in response to increases in the size and capacity of the tractor and other farm machines Since the early sixties, for in stance. farmers have shifted from four-row to six-row planters and cultivators for corn, soybeans, cotton, and potatoes Wheat, barley, and nee producers are using wider tillage machines and seeding drills. In the I'lSO’s . . It is unclear whether the advances in machinery will be as dramatic during the next 10 years, ac cording to the economist who made this study To some extent, farm machine sizes change in response to buyer demand This in turn depends on the buyer’s ability to get more land, either through rental or purchase SPECIAL HERD FRIDAY, MARCH 23 An outstanding herd of York Co Cows with DHIA Records including 15 Guernseys and the rest Holstems Examined for pregnancy Consigned by Harold Housekeeper Special lot of stockers and feeders will be sold at 11 A M. Beef Sale - 11 A.M. Dairy Sale - 1:30 P.M. Hay & Straw Sale - I P.M. GREEN r DRAGON Al\ LIVESTOCK SALES ™ RD3 Ephrata, Pa. 49
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