32—Lancaster Farmim Program Set For Soil Conservation Society’s 28th Annual Meeting Leading natural resource conservationists from the United States and Canada will be on hand when the 28th annual meeting of the Soil Conservation Society of America convenes Sunday, September 30, at the Arlington Hotel in Hot Springs, Arkansas. Theme of the meeting will be “Plants, Animals and Man.” Opening-day activities include CRAWLERS FOR SALE J.D. 2010 loader Case 450 loader Cat 955 -12 A loader 2-Cat 955 Pedal Steer loader 2- 933 loaders Cat D 4 dozer 3- 450 loaders J.D. 420 dozer Int 150 loader Int T 340 loader Int. TD9 dozer A.C. HD7 loader A.C. HDS loader 2-A.C. HD 6 loader J.D. 440 dozer A.C. HD4 loader A.C. HD3 dozer Cat D 6 dozer A.C. HDII with pan A.C. 653 dozer J.D. .440 loader LOTS MORE WENGER’S FARM MACHINERY, INC. So. Race St. Myerstown, Pa. Ph. 717-866-2138 CALL Ylmer Seller %£iea>7lrak • 3 forward speeds, 2 reverse in each of 3 sear ranges. (9 speeds fwd.) e Mid-mounted mower for easy steering. • Super foam seat • 36V electric accessory, PTO outlets, headlights and dashlights. • Effortless manual lift. Fits standard Elec-Trak front implements. • Single lever speed control puts for ward and reverse at your fingertips. • Instruments show fuel use and quan tity. • Power pulse button for heavy loads. • Optional heavy duty power pack. OTHER MODELS AVAILABLE 20% Discount ON ALL GE EL EC-IRAK'S ON INVENTORY CALL Leroy Zook WEAVERLINE FEED CART'S EARLY DISCOUNT on Lancaster Silo and Unioaders.Ryder Barn Equipment ™RADIO CONTROU.EB FOR BETTER SERVICE HI C. B. HOOBER & SON ■H. INTERCOURSE, PJEWWiV. Saturday. August 4. 1973 registration and a president’s reception. Andrew Vayda, professor and acting associate dean of the Rutgers University Department of Anthropology, will keynote the. meeting during the opening general session on Monday, October 1. Vayda, a graduate of Columbia University, has studied human ecology and culture in New Mexico, several South Sea locations and eastern Long Island. Society President A. B. Linford of Bozeman, Montana, will deliver his president’s address during the opening session also. Featured speaker at Monday’s luncheon will be Arkansas Senator J. William Fulbright. General sessions are also slated for Tuesday and Wed nesday mornings. Afternoon programs on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday will feature concurrent technical sessions sponsored by the Society’s 10 resource conservation divisions. Among the nationally known speakers who will appear on the, meeting program are John Gray, director of the University of Florida School of Forest Resources and Conservation; L. S. Pope, associate dean of ad ministrative affairs at Texas A&M University; E. L. Cheatham, director of the University of Georgia Institute of Natural Resources; Jack Carlson, assistant to the director for economic policy, Office of Management and Budget; and> Lance Marston, director of the Office of Regional Planning, U. S. Department of the Interior. The Society’s House of Delegates will meet on Wed- nesday afternoon. An awards banquet will conclude the meeting that evening. During the four-day event, the Society will name the recipient of the first Hugh Hammond Bennett Yield Grade Stomping Procedure Changed The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) is notifying retail grocers, trade groups, and meat packers, of a change in procedure for identifying beef carcasses which have been of ficially graded for yield of cuts. Yield grading is a voluntary service which is provided for a fee, as is quality grading. Both services are provided by the Meat Grading Branch of the Livestock Division, Of USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service. Yield grades indicate the percentage of salable meat in a carcass and range from Yield Grade 1, which indicates the highest yield, to Yield Grade 5, the lowest. The amount of waste fat on a carcass is the most significant factor affecting the yield. Of the waste fat, the kidney and pelvic fat makes a significant part of the total. In recent months, some meat packers have begun presenting carcasses for yield grading after removing the kidney and pelvic fat. This practice results in a higher carcass yield grade, Anticipate Rise in West European Corn Production Increased corn production in Western Europe could cause a drop in U. S. corn exports there by 1980, according to a report by Call Bob & Les USED EQUIPMENT Farmall 460 G Tractor Farmall Super M Tractor A & C Cultivators Farmall 400 Tractor N.H. No. 23 Hopper Blower ■ New SP International Combines J. D. Fertilizer Spreader |Hc Grimm Hay Tedder 816 Mower Conditioner $1,000.00 5 ft. Rotary cutter tow type $375.00 Ask Us For a Demonstration on a 990 Mower- Conditioner PARTS DEPARTMENT CALL Dick Bomberger CALL US! IT COULD BE WE HAVE IT. Golden Molrin Fly Bolt 1 lb. can $1.35" 5 lb. can $4.95 Starbar Simax Dairy and Beef Cattle Dust $ 3.40 per Bag CHECK YOUR INTERNATIONAL MOWER SUPPLIES NOW Guards as Low as $ 1.24 ea. Mower Sections as Low as 16 c ea. Mower Knives as low as *lB.BO Genuine I.H. Baler & Binder Twine Award. Fellow, Honor and Merit Award winners for 1973 will be announced also. Official hosts for the meeting are members of the Society’s Razorback Chapter. reflecting the higher yield of cuts for the entire carcass. Previously, a carcass which was yield graded was stamped once on each quarter or primal cut with the identifying shield shaped yield grade stamp. To distinquish between those carcasses yield graded with the kidney and pelvic fat intact and those yield graded after removal of those fats, the meat grading service now is identifying the latter by double stamping the yield grade shield on each quarter or primal cut. Carcasses yield graded with kidney and pelvic fat intact will continue to be identified by the single yield grade stamp on each quarter or primal cut. Meat grading officials em phasize that for buyers of whole carcasses, it makes very little difference whether the yield grade is determined before or after removal of kidney and pelvic fat, but for those buying quarters or primal cuts, it does influence the yield of salable product. Therefore, those buying cuts or quarters need to note the marking procedure used. the IL S. Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Service. Output may increase to 33.4 million tons— CALL Titus Burkholder FOR SALES—SERVICE—PARTS ELIMINATE EXTRA HELP GET FASTER MILKING INCREASE PRODUCTION Model JRT . jar for use wii pi .ig. moving capacity of 900 pounds per-hour Vacuum consumption less than ICFM. FOR COMPLETE DETAILS CALL TITUS USED BULK TANKS D 2 1000 gal. Girton 350 gal. Esco D 2 500 gal. Girton 500 gal. Mueller 500 gal. Esco 545 gal. Sun Set. USED DIESELS 6-1 Lister 6 H.P. Slow Speed Radiator Cooled 8 HP. Faryman with Electric Start AXA Fetter Air Cooled 12 HP. Completely Reconditioned SR2 Lister Air Cooled 12 HP. Reconditioned HR2 Lister with Haas Clutch 25 HP. Electric Start AVAI Fetter Air Cooled 5 HP. Good Condition slightly more than double the 1969-71 calendar year average. West European utilization of corn is projected at 45.0 million tons by 1980. With domestic production at 33.4 million tons, the implied net import requirement is 11.6 million tons, a decrease of 13 percent from the 1969-70-71-72 crop year average. An implied net import requirement of 11.6 million tons of corn is also projected for 1975- 76, so that a stablizing of corn imports is foreseen for 1975-76 to 1980-81. Assuming the United States shares proportionately in the decreased import need, U. S. com exports to Western Europe would fall to a level of about seven million tons during this period. The U. S. share of net com imports into Western Europe was 60 percent from 1960-61 to 1971-72, or an annual average of 8.2 million tons. In 1972, however, due largely to shortfalls in com output in other world suppliers, U. S. com sales to Western Europe rose to 12 million tons valued at over $6OO million. French corn production would account for the bulk of the ex panded West European supply. France accounted for 46 percent of the region’s output in 1969-71, and is expected to attain 56 percent in 1980 A copy of “Growth Potential of Corn Production in Western Europe Through 1975 and 1980,” FAER 88, is available free on postcard (please include zipcode) or telephone (447-7255) request from the Office of Com; munication, U. S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. 20250. Lancaster Farming Ads Pay ■