Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, October 13, 1973, Image 39

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    * * • «.
. ‘ —'* I ■"» m
There may be more beautiful times: but this one is ours.’
(Jean-Paul Sartre )
SPECIAL
FALL SALE JS
TO BE HELD
WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 17, 1973,
at 7*oo P.M.
SHENANDOAH VALLEY
LIVESTOCK SALES, INC.
1044 Edom Road Harrisonburg, Virginia
TELEPHONE 434-4482
YEARLINGS, HEAVY FEEDERS, STOCK COWS, STOCK
BULLS, CATTLE OF ALL BREEDS, NO SPECIAL
REQUIREMENTS, ALL CATTLE FRESH FROM FARM
REGULAR SALE EVERY SATURDAY
COME BUY OR SELL
REGISTERED
HOLSTEIN
DISPERSAL
THURSDAY, OCT. 25,1973
Location: 10 miles East of Lancaster, just off Rt.
#-30, north of Leaman Place, (along Londonvale
Road) Lancaster Co., Pa. 4 miles West of Gap. Form*
erly, Elmer Hershey Farm.
52 cows and fresh heifers, 2 bred heifers, 12 open
heifers, 6 started calves. (12 Grades included) (30 day
tested for interstate). 13 due throughout fall, several
winter, others fresh or bred recently for early sum
mer freshening.
Alternate A.M. —P.M. testing
Included in Sale:
(Kingpin dtr.) 5y 5m 345 d 21,879 m 773 f 3.6%, due in
winter to Iv. Star
(Adm. Pride Duke dtr.) 6y 305 d 17,923 m 688 f 3.8%,
(due Oct.)
(Waybrook Paramount dtr.) 5y 292 d 17,503 m 669 f
3.8%, was fresh July
(Pineyhill Galaxy dtr.) 2y 8m 305 d 15,848 m 564 f
3.6% (due Oct. to Iv. Star)
(Lassie Leader dtr.) 3y 6m 334 d 15,218 m 633 f 4.1%
(due Oct. to Ivanhoe Star)
(Fultonway Iv. Wlywyn dtr.) ly 11m 368 d 14,073 m
659 f 4.6% (due Oct. to Ivanhoe Star)
Dtrs. of Penstate Starman, Tidy Burke Jerry,
UTAG Ivanhoe Ultimate, Round Oak Electron, Pretz
Burke Idol, Milk & Honey Ivanhoe, Paclamar Con
firmation, plus others by Atlantic, Sire Power and
Canadian sires.
Service Sires include Penstate Ivanhoe Star, Moo
kown Optimist, Penn Octo Kenny, Etc.
2—Very Goods—(1) by Dibble Ideal Dictator, (I) by
Rayside Majesty Mark
Sele held in tent, Catalogs at ringside.
Plan to see this herd. ,
1 i
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.1,-1 I'jl,
Auttsi, I .Pedigrees, Sal? Mgrs, ,
CarhDiller 717-464-2233 \
LlEverettKreider 717-284-4517
' i i 1 , i',; / 1 1 } , ' ' '
■ „i ’ Lunch Available •
t: i ,i. i»■ » l , ' ' *
12:30
HEAD
Sires Represented
Included are
OWNERS.
Henry & Roy Eby
71*7-687-7540
', 717-768-3021
aXU
72
r , -1 t
Shapp to Address Grangers
Delegates to the 101st Penn
sylvania State Convention in
Reading October 22-25 will hear
important messages on
agriculture from Governor
Milton J. Shapp and Dr. Russell
E. Larson, Pennsylvania State
University provost. >
They will be the principal
speakers at Tuesday sessions,
October 23, State Grange Master
A. Wayne Readinger said today
Governor Shapp will address
several thousand delegates of the
58,000-member Grange at the
Tuesday afternoon session,
October 13 at the Rajah Theatre.
He also will be a guest of honor
and bring greetings to those
attending the annual banquet at
the Abraham Lincoln Hotel
Tuesday evening.
Dr. Larson, former dean ot the
College of Agriculture at Penn
State, will be the keynote speaker
at the Tuesday evening banquet.
FALL FEEDER SALE
West Nottingham Auction
Rt. 276, Rising Sun, Md.
THURSDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 18, 1073
7:30 p.m.
ALL BREEDS
Consignments after 8:00 a.m. Sale Day
•Hauling Available
Phone 301-287-8937
F. LEE MOORE, Auctioneer and Manager
PUBLIC SALE
HOUSEHOLD GOODS,
ANTIQUES and
AAISCELLANEOUS
Location: Take Route 372 and go West 2 miles
from “The Buck” to Susquehannock Drive, go south
to Furnis Drive to Sale.
SATURDAY, OCT. 20, 1973
12 NOON
Elec, stove, G.E. refrigerator, 3 bar stools, wal
nut magazine rack, table lamps, chifferobe, vanity
dresser, Nu tone range hood, bureau, 9 x 12 rug and
mat, 2 sweet potato barrels, strawberry crates, iron
bed, many quart jars.
ANTIQUES
Flour chest (nice), wagon jack, 5 gal jugs, 6 large
picture frames, 8 day clock, high chair, buggy light,
lantern, old bottles, match box, waffle iron, shoe
lathe, organ stool, irons, trivots, 15 doz. egg crate,
nail kegs, 2 hay forks single & double.
200 bu. Triticale Seed 8 Ton Hay
Hog troughs, 2 farrowing crates, 4 hole hog feed
er, hog holder, auto, hog waterer, grinder & sausage
staffer, cement mixer, garden harrow for Cub Cadet,
grill guard for 1.H.C., 3 elec, fencers, elec, fence
stakes, 5 m. belt 90 ft. long, 1 hole cornsheller, plat
form scales, sawbuck for tractor, Cardinal 16 ft ele
vacoi witn motor, 2 sec. peg harrow, sub soiler (3 pt.),
new & used ash & oak lumber, 300 lb. Porto scales,
burlap & grain bags, 4 in. Auger, chicken crates, gas
pump, flame thrower, air compressor, emory wheel
& motor, Cyclone seeder, used galvanized roofing,
3 water cans, 5 gal. gas cans, 200 amp. service box
for outside, 100 amp. switch, used 15 in. tires, 1929
Ford headlight, 46 & 47 Mercury parts, 1955-57 Thund
erbird rear. ' 1
i , i i
Other articles not mentioned ,
- Terms by,
ROBERT W. ARMSTRONG
Kreider & Diller Aucts. ' >,
i, ' i
Lunch by Fulton Grange ' ' ,
. ! • .i.
, '<<
Lancaster Farrtiirtg, Saturday, October 13,1973
Governor Shapp, an Ohio
native, has gained a national
reputation as a progressive,
innovative industrialist and as a
strong advocate of human rights.
Following service in the U. S.
Army during World War 11, he
pioneered the development of
community antenna television
and founded a multi-million
dollar business employing more
than 2,000 people. The new in
dustry which he created, the
community antenna television
business, now serves more than
3,000 communities m the United
States and employs 75,000 per
sons.
A native of Minnesota, Dr.
Larson has had wide experience
in domestic and foreign
agricultural programs. In ad
dition to serving as dean of the
College of Agriculture at Penn
State, he served as director of the
Agricultural Experiment Station
there from 1969 to 1972, and
director of Agricultural and
Home Economics Extension
from 1971 to 1972. He was named
provost at Penn State m July
1972.
Dr. Larson served as a
scientific aide to the Mexican
Agricultural Program of the
Rockefeller Foundation in 1960;
as a member of the committee on
review of the University of Costa
Rica in 1965, and as a member of
research teams to Argentina in
1962,1966 and again in 1968 From
1958 to 1962, he was a consultant
of the Office of Experiment
Stations of the U. S. Department
of Agriculture
USDA Steps
Up Mea ,
Poultry' ests
in South
The residue testing program
for meat and poultry going to
slaughter in several southeastern
states will be increased after a
flock of broiler chickens from
Monroe, N.C. was found to
contain residues of the in
secticide chlordane well above
the working tolerance, it was
announced by the U.S. Depart
ment of Agriculture (USDA).
USDA’s Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service em
phasized that the action was
taken as a precautionary
measure, and will be continued
until the exact source of the
chlordane is pinpointed.
The insecticide showed up in
routine tests conducted by the
processor just prior to slaughter.
USDA was promptly notified of
the findings. The affected
chickens, produced by Central
Soya, Inc. of Monroe, N.C., were
destroyed.
The tests showed that the birds
contained residues of three parts
per million. The working
tolerance for chlordane in meat
and poultry is 0.3 p.p.m.
No residues were found in other
Central Soya flocks. However,
the company in cooperation with
USDA, has launched an im
mediate investigation of the
farms and feed mills to deter
mine the source.
Altogether, Central Soya under
USDA supervision is testing 42
flocks in the area representing
750.000 chickens and
90.000 turkeys prior to their being
released for slaughter.
I d -
The British must march
to the beat of a different
drummer, as they call him
a traveller.
DRAFT HORSES
AND
MULES
This is the largest selection of
draft horses and mules to be
found anywhere.
If you are looking for horses,or
mules with quality and size we
have them,
PAULS.
WALTERMYER
Jonestown RDI, Pa. 17038
Phone 717-865-2234 '
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