Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, May 05, 1973, Image 11

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    tight and
SQUARE
Wide, clean-sweeping pickup lifts stems gently into the
feeder housing. There, Twin-Feed rakes take over and move
hay in a controlled stream to the bale chamber. Heavy-duty
ram in the husky chamber packs the crop into well-formed,
tight bales the length you want. Dependable twine knotter or
wire twister ties bales securely. And for fast, one-man
haymaking, add the 44 bale thrower that lets you place bales
wherever you want them in the wagon from the tractor
seat.
The 443 baler has a two-joint power line, the 444 a three-joint.
When your haying operation calls for square bales, see your
Allis-Chalmers dealer for a 443 or 444. Both give you bales that
are uniform, compact, nutritious, easy to handle, easy to stack
and easy to feed. You’ll discover that baling Orange is baling
great.
BHM Farm Equipment, Inc.
Grumelli Farm Service
L. H. Brubaker
Lancaster, Pa. Rphrata. R D 2
a Nissley Farm Service
i % Washington Boro, Pa.
£\ ALLIS-CHALMERS
AGRICULTURAL EQUIPMENT
WEABUY THE TAGS
... when you come into
Fulton Bank to finance
your car!
Fulton Bank is continuing its exciting free license tag program l Here’s
how it works When you come into any Fulton Bank office and finance a
new or 1973, 72 or 71 used car, we-will buy the license tags for your car
for the length of the loan
This offer good on any 1973, 72 or 71 model car or station wagon—any
make, any size, any price To become eligible, just finance your car by coming
into any Fulton Bank office for a low cost auto loan You’ll receive free license
plates every year for the length of the loan if all monthly payments are paid when
they are due It's too good a deal to pass up
- Not to exceed $l4 per year for passenger cars or $l6 per year for station
wagons Maximum three years
©FULTON
BANK
SERVING LANCASTER AND DAUPHIN COUNTIES
ALLIS-CHALMERS 443 and 444
balers put your hay in square,
compact bales that can take
tough handling \ .have a gentle,
leaf-saving action, coupled with
the big capacity you need to
handle high-yielding crops
quickly. You’ll save a maximum
of protein-nch leaves, .get your
hay in while it’s m top condition.
Annville. R D 1, Pa
Quarryville. Pa
Roy H. Buch, Inc.
<o*
FFA Members
Three Lancaster County FFA
members competed in the In
ternational Land Judging Contest
this week in Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma.
Team members included
Gerald Musser, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Musser, Ephrata RDI,
John Herr, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Herr, Quarryville RD2, and
Mike Roland
College of Agriculture Offers
New Poultry Health Handbook
Preventive medicine is the only
sane approach to health
management in today’s intensive
poultry operations. As flock size
doubles, the possibilities of
disease quadruple, according to a
“Poultry Health Handbook”
published by the Pennsylvania
State University’s College of
Agriculture.
The handbook, prepared by Dr
L. Dwight Schwartz, Extension
veterinarian, is designed to
provide poultrymen, ser
vicemen, fieldmen, and hat
cherymen with a ready and
accessible source of information
about poultry diseases and other
aspects of poultry health.
“The introductory section
includes such information as
locations of diagnostic
laboratories, sanitation outline,
list of reliable disinfectants, a
description of the Pennsylvania
Lancaster Farming, Saturday. May 5.1973
Compete At Oklahoma City
Mike Roland, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Homer Roland, New
Providence. Musser is an
agriculture student at Ephrata
High School while Herr and
Roland are students at Solanco
High School.
Team members qualified by
placing in the state contest held
last year at Penn State.
John Herr
Vaccination Program, and other
facts useful for creating .and
maintaming sound poultry health
programs,” Dr. Schwartz points
out.
Another section covers the
respiratory diseases of poultry
regardless of causative agent,
but other sections deal with
diseases caused by a particular
type of agent-virus, bacteria,
protozoa, or parasites. Still
another section is devoted to
miscellaneous poultry diseases.
The book may be purchased for
$2.50 plus 6 percent Pennsylvania
sales tax. Make check or money
order payable to The Penn
sylvania State University and
send with your name and address
to POULTRY HEALTH HAND
BOOK, Box 6000, University
Park, Pa. 16802. -
Paul Musser
U.S. Govt.
Selling Land
In Leb. Co.
The U.S. Government’s
General Services Ad
ministration, Property
Management and Disposal
Service, Region 3, announced
today that it is offering for sale a
portion of the Veteran’s Ad
ministration Hospital Grounds,
Lebanon, Pennsylvania, con
sisting of approximately 50 acres
of unimproved land. The land is
being offered for sale in three
seperate parcels: Parcel No 1,
31.63 acres; Parcel No. 2, 17.42
acres, and Parcel No. 3, 117
acres.
Bids will be opened at 1 p m ,
local time, June 1, 1973, at the
GSA Regional Office Building,
Room 1701, Seventh and D
Streets, SW , Washington, DC
20407. Additional information and
copies of the Bid Form No. GS-03-
DR(S)-30041 may be obtained
from the GSA Business Service
Center at the above address.
TRY A
CLASSIFIED AD!
PHONE 626-2191
or 394-3047
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