Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, July 14, 1973, Image 16

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    —Lancaster Farming, Saturday. July 14, 1973
16
Mow’d You
Like To Face
These Odds?
How’d you like to be up
against odds of 4,000 to 3?
If your sporting instincts
draw back in the face of such
odds, the National Cotton
Council says you might be
interested to know that five
per cent of the U.S. popula
tion runs these risks will
ingly every year in producing
food and fiber to meet the
needs of the other 95 per
cent.
According to scientists,
these are the kind of odds a
farmer faces just from weeds
alone when he plants a crop.
Take soybeans, for ex
ample. At normal planting
populations, it’s estimated
that three soybean seeds
could be battling as many as
4,000 weed seeds for the same
nutrients and moisture.
Weeds are among the most
expensive pests faced by
farmers. In a recent year,
they cost farmers over $5 bil
lion in terms of yields, crop
quality, and control steps.
Chemical herbicides, crop
rotations, and narrow-row
planting practices are some
of the methods currently be
ing used to combat weeds in
cotton. Scientists also are
looking at new possibilities
like micro-waves and lasers
for more effective and less
expensive weed control.
In 1972, the U S. Department of
Agriculture spent $3.47 billion on
programs for food distribution,
food stamps, child nutrition and
school milk. This was nearly one
third of the entire USDA budget.
New idea’s Uni-Forage Harvester
Superchopper
chops 15% more
Same Uni interchangeability and rugged dependability
in a bigger capacity forage harvester
You’d better have enough forage vemence, more capacity Plus the
boxes around when you use Uni- flexibility of Uni-System’s mter-
Superchopper changeable gathering heads and
When there’s chopping to be done, harvesting units for small grain,
here’s the self-propelled forage har- beans and corn
vester more farmers use than any This new Superchopper is a smooth
other operating unit that will get your job
done, hour after hour, day after day
Now with more reliability, more con-
See Uni-Forage Harvester—the Superchopper at
A. L.HERR&BRO
Quarry ville
KINZER EQUIP CO
Kinzer
LONGENECKER
FARM SUPPLY
Rheems
College Scholarships Aid 4-H'ers
Majoring in Home Economics
SPECIAL - Four scholar
ships totaling $3,200 are
being offered to college home
economics majors, according
to the National 4-H Service
Committee, Chicago.
Present or former 4-H
members, who are entering
their junior year in the fall of
1973 who plan to major in
home economics are eligible
to apply for these awards.
Provided by The S&H Foun
dation, Inc., and The West
Bend Company, each donor
funds two $BOO scholarships.
State 4-H leaders and
county extension offices can
provide the special applica
tion forms and advise candi-
dates of closing dates for
accepting the forms and sup-
CUSTOM TRUCK BODIES
for hauling
Cattle & Horses
D. K. HOSTETLER, INC.
BELLEVILLE, PENNA. 17004
PHONE 717-935-2151
CHAS. J. McCOMSEV
&SONS
Hickory Hill, Pa
LANDIS BROS., INC
Lancaster
porting materials.
The Cooperative Exten
sion Service, which supervises
4-H programs, selects the win
ners on the basis of their
interest and desire to major in
home economics, financial
need, scholastic record and all
around work in 4-H.
Announcement of the win
ners will be made during the
1973 National 4-H Congress
in Chicago, Nov. 25-29.
Recipients of the awards
in 1972 were: Nancy Rich
mond, Claremont, N.H., Mar
cia Winnies, Chadbourn, N.C.;
Elaine Nesseth, Windom,
Minn, i id Ida Mitchell, Bur
lington, Okla.
The four scholarship win
ners are among some 268
ROYH. BUCK, INC
Ephrata, R.D 2
N.G. HERSHEY & SON
Manheim
STOLTZFUS
FARM SERVICE
Cochranville, Pa.
scholarships worth $186,300
being offered current and
former 4-H members by
America’s private sector,
through the National 4-H
Service Committee in 1973.
NEW RED ROSE HIGH SPIRIT.
SOME HOUSES MEED IT AUL Of THE TIME,
ALL HORSES NEED IT SOME OF THE TIME.
High Spirit is a new,
thoroughly tested, highly
palatable supplement. It con
tains 12 important sustaining
vitamins, 11 complementary
minerals, and a list of in
gredients you know and
respect but can’t find in other
feed supplements. Complete
* instructions, analysis, and
measuring cup with every
package. Follow the instruc
u tions, and you’ll notice an
improvement in coat, aleVt
ness, and eyes. High Spirit,
SjgSSP* makers of horse feeds
■ over 130 years We have it,
high staff
A * '
WAITER BINKLEY & SON G „ MITCHELL, INC.
Kefton Pd
BROWN & REA, INC.
Atglcn
ELVERSON SUPPLY CO.
Klverson
HENRY E. GARBER
Elizabethtown Fa
E. MUSSER HEISEY
& SON
K I) 1 Mt Joy Pa
HEISTAND BROS.
Kli/abelhtown
DAVID B. HURST
How mansville
H. M. STAUFFER
MARTIN'S FEED MILL & SONS, INC.
h phrata Pa
If food had gone up in price at
the same rate as wages in in
dustry, a quart of milk today
would cost 55 cents in the store, a
dozen eggs would sell for $1.61,
and a whole, dressed frying
chicken would cost $1.46 a pound.
MOUNTVILLE
FEED SERVICE
Mountvilie
MUSSER FARMS, INC.
RED ROSE FARM
SERVICE, INC.
N Church St , Quarryville
CHAS. E. SAUDER
& SONS
Terre Hill
E. P. SPOTTS, INC.
Columbia
Honey Brook
Witmer