Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, April 28, 1973, Image 15

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    TRY A CLASSIFIED AD
When the crew is you
nuiMiifis®
Even m a one-man operation. Hesston makes it possible
to include a moderate size haying program with the Stak-
Hand® 10 Yes, the StakHand 10 will get your hay up
and out of the weather at the hourly rate of four to six
tons And the stacks have self-storing, weather-resistant
capabilities Couple the StakHand with a StakMover 10
and you can put up hay one day, then move it later on
See us for all the benefits of a StakHand right away We
can even show you how the StakHand 10 system lends
itself to feeding programs
u'StakHand is a registered trademark of the Hesston Corporation
STAUFFER DIESEL, MC.
Commonwealth National Bank A
Lancaster • Centerville • Lancaster East • Landisville • Lititz • Manheim Township • Millersville
Rohrerstown • Elizabethtown • Willow Street • Additional offices throughout South Central Pennsylvania
M«mb*r FOIC
W W
312 W. Main St.
New Holland, Pa. 17557
Ph. (717) 354-4181
.Gota home
improvement
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As much as $5OOO. As long as
five years. As soon as today!
Happy to help you at any office.
•»*
Pa. Streams
ii i.nii Plant Breeders Offered
mapAvanaoie n _ _• r .
Frotection Certificates
All sorts of outdoorsmen may
be interested in the Stream Map
of the Commonwealth, published
by the Agricultural Experiment
Station «t The Pennsylvania
State University. The map gives
the names and locations of major
mountains, valleys, lakes, dams,
swamps, and reservoirs.
The detailed Stream Map is
about three feet wide by five feet
long. The scale is six miles to the
inch. Geographical 1 features
included are 3,000 each of
streams, towns, arid elevations
above sea level.
The map is available for $1.06,
tax included, from Stream Map,
Box 6000, University Park, Pa.
16802. It is available in two styles,
flat or folded. In ordering, please
indicate which type you want.
Checks or money orders should
be made payable to The Penn
sylvania State University.
When visiting the Penn State
campus at University Park, the
Stream Map can be obtained in
room 232 of the Agricultural
The first certificates of
protection to breeders of new
varieties of plants reproduced
through seeds were awarded
recently by Commissioner
Stanley F. Rollin, of the Plant
Variety Protection Office in the
U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Each certificate grants to the
breeder for 17 years the right to
exdude others from selling the
variety, or offering it for sale,
reproducing it, importing it, or
using it in producing a hybrid or
a different variety.
In awarding the certificates,
Commissioner Rollin closed a 40-
year gap in protection for plant
breeders. Since 1930, breeders of
plants which reproduce asexually
Administration Building. The
office is open from 8:00 a.m. to
5:00 p.m., Monday through
Friday. The map was produced
by Howard W. Higbee, professor
emeritus of soil technology.
«’ - i rum ih# ininnr i fop* I
> ?»ncaster Farming Saturday. April 28,1973—15
been made for protection, in
volving 56 species of plants. The
largest numbers of applications
are for soybeans, wheat, cotton,
beans, peas, and asters. USDA
plant variety examiners are
currently concentrating on these
applications to determine
whether the varieties are distinct
and meet requirements for
protection.
Information on obtaining
protection under the Act may be
obtained by calling or writing the
Plant Variety Protection Office,
Grain Division, Agricultural
Marketing Service, U.S.
Department of Agriculture, 6525
Belcrest Road, Hyattsville, Md.
20782, telephone (301) 436-8547.
through grafting and budding
have had protection through
patents issued by theU.S.
Patent Office. Now, under the
Plant Variety Protection Act,
breeders of plants which
reproduce through seeds can
receive similar protection.
“With this new protection,”
Mr. Rollin said, “we can now
expect an increase on the
American scene of new varieties
of grain, oilseed, fiber, forage,
vegetable, and ornamental crops
which reproduce through seeds.”
“As well as being unique, the
new varieties could be more
productive, more heat and
drought resistant, longer lasting
after harvest, and better
designed for shipping. Also, there
is potential for new varieties that
are naturally more resistant to
disease and insects,” Mr. Rollin
said.
The certificates covering six
new varieties of lettuce were
awarded to: Asgrow Seed Co.,
Kalamazoo, Mich., for Great
Lakes 649-700; W. Atlee Burpee
Co., Philadelphia, Pa., for Green
Ice; Ferry-Morse Seed Co.,
Mountain View, Calif., for
Montemar, Super 59 and Van
max; and Keystone „ Seed Co.,
Hollister, Calif., for Picoverde.
Enacted in December 1970, the
Plant Variety Protection Act is
administered by USDA’s
Agricultural Marketing Service.
As of April 1,342 applications had
Ihe Old Im&t
TM
“Are you a thoughtful
doubter, or a doubtful
thinker?”
WWickes
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