—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 31, 1973 30 Study Shows Most Wells Unfit For Use More than half the farmers in Lancaster County are en dangering the health of their families and their livestock by letting them consume con- - laminated well water, according to two sampling Testing of 27 northern Lan caster County farms showed that drinking water is unfit for human consumption in about 60 percent of the samplings. Another sampling of about 1,200 farms in eastern Lancaster County over the past five years showed that the drinking water was unfit for human consumption in about 57 per cent of the sam plings HIGH BACTERIA COUNT Most dangerous to the coun ty’s rural residents and livestock is the high content of coliform bacteria in the water which breeds typhoid, dysentery, diarrhea and intestinal worms. Also present in a majority of the samplings was a high content of nitrates which is also dangerous especially to infants. The alarming high incidence of rural water supply pollution was discussed by a panel of experts Tuesday night before the Kphrata Adult Farmer class at Ephrata Area High School, which conducted such a sampling in aM INVITATION TO: DAIRYMEN, POULTRYMEN, LIVESTOCK FEEDERS. Friday, April 6,2 P.M. & 7:30 P.M. at Roy A. Brubaker’s Store, 700 Woodcrest Ave., 1 mile Southwest of Lititz. HIGH FEED COSTS? Our newest product line is an automatic Mix-Mill farm feed processing system. The basic Mix-Mill processer consists of a 4 or 5 ingredient blender and grinder which is 98 percent accurate. Pac kage systems are available with storage and" handling facilities We plan to have a Mix-Mill unit on display. A representative of the Mix-Mill Co. and a representative of a pre-mix feed supplier will be here to help calculate possible feed savings for your operation. Ask about piu jgt >yi 30 ft high, 4 compartment, overhead ingredient storage, building erected with processing center for under $9OOO Also ask about Mix Mills soybean cleaning and roasting equipment L.H. BRUBAKER ROY A. BRUBAKER 350 Strasburg Pike Lancaster, Pa Tel. 397-5179 northern Lancaster County, Charles Ackley, agriculture teacher of the Ephrata Adult Farmer program, said the samplings were taken with the utmost care and precision. He said the situation is a grave one of which many farmers are unaware. Dr. Melvyn G. Wenger, an Ephrata veterinarian, said many livestock abortions and poor production, such as in dairy cattle, can be attributed to contaminated water. He also noted that the polluted water is just as dangerous, if not more so, to humans. He 'said breast-fed babies of mothers who drink the contaminated water can develop serious com plications According to the Ephrata area samplings for the coliform test, only 41 percent of the drinking water was safe Ackley said 11 percent can be considered hazardous and 48 percent unfit. In the nitrate test, 37 percent was found potable, with less than 10 parts per million of nitrates, which ’63 percent tested un suitable One of the panel members, Dr Robert D. Herr, vocational agriculture teacher with the Eastern Lancaster County School Here are 6 reasons why the new Mix-Mill Feed Processing Center is a better investment than a PTO grinder-mixer: 1. Fast and easy Just load in grains, set the dials. Shuts off automatically 2 Low-cost operation 700 Woodcrest Ave. Lititz, Pa. Tel. 626-7766 District, said samplings con ducted by his students over the past five years show similar results. Dr. Herr said his students have conducted over 1,200 samplings over the past five years, with 57 percent testing unfit. this year, he said, his student took about 300 samples with 46.7 percent showing dangerous levels of-coliform. In the nitrate testing, he said 29 percent were over die health standard. He also said that in a study three years ago, 52 percent of the farms teasted showed unfit water. Compared to that, he said 29 percent of rural nonfarm 'residents had contaminated water and 40 percent of the residents in developments without municipal water supplies showed unfit. James Humphreville, a Lan caster Consulting geologist, said much of the problem results from poorly placed wells. Humphreville said his testing has shown that many wells are contaminated from nearby septic tanks or drainage from nearby cow pastures where either excess manure ofc nitrate fertilizers are in excess. ' According' to C. 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