Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, December 29, 1973, Image 8

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    £—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 29 r 1973
Changes Planned for Traditional
. k H
Auction of Farm Show Entries
HARRISBURG
traditional Friday afternoon
wind-up of the Pennsylvania
State Farm Show -- the auction of
all entries in the 4-H Baby Beef
and the 4-H Market Lamb classes
- will have a total change of
format at the 58th show which
opens at the Farm Show com
plex, Monday, January 7, for a
five-day run.
First of all, the sale will be
shifted from the Mam Arena to
the newly refurbished small
arena which is really not all that
small, with a comfortable seating
capacity of 1,500
Secondly, the Vocational
(F F.A ) Market Hogs class has
been expanded to include, for the
first time, a Market Hog Sale in
the small arena, Friday af
ternoon, starting at 12:30 p.m.
and immediately preceding the
market lamb and baby beef
(steer) sales.
And third, all three shows and
sales have been redesignated as
Junior shows so that both 4-H and
FFA members will be able to
enter all three events.
It is anticipated that buyers
from the Commonwealth’s
leading abattoirs will patronize
the hog sale in the same manner
She can't afford to eat hay.
And you can't afford to feed It.
If she is under two months of age, a dairy replacement
heifer should have no hay whatsoever in her ration. Hay is
too difficult for her underdeveloped rumen to digest Hay
doesn’t have the nutrition required for proper growth and
development; it takes up rumen space that should be filled
with a high quality feed such as Purina Calf Startena®
No, a very young dairy replacement heifer can’t afford
the shortcomings of hay. And neither can you if building
maximum milk production is your goal.
Would you want to jeopardize Calf Startena benefits?
When fed as recommended, Calf Startena provides a “just
right” balance of nutrients. Its low-fiber, high-energy
formula is more easily digested, and at the same time it
stimulates papillary development in the rumen. In addition,
improved growth and feed efficiency are helped by a
proven antibiotic additive.
Your Purina dealer has some mighty interesting facts
about the superior performance of Calf Startena, including
test results which show a 19 percent faster growth rate for
heifers fed a hay-free ration. Be sure to see your Purina
dealer and this important information before you start
that next group of replacements.
John J. Hess, 11, Inc.Jomes High & Sons
Ph. 442-4632 Ph: 354-0301
Paradise Gordonville
West Willow Farmers j ohn B . Kurtz
ASSn., InC. Ph: 354-9251
Ph; 464-3431 R.D.3, Ephrata
West Willow
Ira B. Landis
Ph; 665-3248
Box 276, Manheim RD3
mmmmm m ■ ■ ■
that they have the steer and lamb
sales in the past. That is, the
junior livestock feeder with the
grand champion hog can expect
to take home a check for many
times the current market price
for a slaughter hog
The
The tradition of paying a
premium for the honor of taking
home the grand champion baby
beef started a long time ago, in
the mid-20’s, but records prior to
1948 are unavailable Howard
Johnson Restaurants v fed the
tradition and succeeded in
pushing the bidding to $5.31 per
pound in 1966 for a 1,060 pound
Hereford steer In 1972, Donnie
Dorwart, Lancaster County, won
and although he was bid only
$5 17 per pound, the 1,175 pound
weight of his fat Angus pushed
the total price to a new record,
$5,992.50.
At last year’s show, all records
tumbled. Myers Fbodtown,
Dillsburg, York County, bid $5.48
per pound to gross $6,439 for the
tearful but happy youthful
exhibitor, Linda Miller, Halifax,
Dauphin County.
A record that is likely to stand
longer than Babe Ruth’s
homerun total was the paycheck
that Julia Staver, Dauphin
Purina Calf Startena:
Another product to help insure
your future in the dairy business.
Wenger's Feed Mill Inc.
Ph: 367-1195
Rheems
\ I
m m_»
County, took home two years ago
for her 91 -pound Dorset market
lamb. In 1971, the grand cham
pion market lamb brought $9.00
per pound, a 50 percent jump on
the top dollar paid six years
earlier But in 1972, Julia stood by
in a state of happy shock as she
watched the bidding to to $32.00
per pound and a payoff of $2,912,
generally believed not only to be
a Farm Show record, but
probably the most money paid
anywhere in the world for a
market lamb
What will the first grand
champion junior market hog
bring 7 No one will really know
until the auctioneer cries,
“Sold!” but you can be sure it
will be much more than the
current market price of 45 cents
per pound
p® 7
%
A belief that’s basically for
the birds is that an albatross
hovering above a ship would
bring on bad weather!
THE MOST HE
FEATURES IN
MORE NEW M
1
/ /
WE SELL, SERVICE AND INSTALL
»* E. M. HERR EQUIPMENT, INC.
MANY FARM SEED ITEMS ARE IN SHORT SUPPLY
fW
DeKalb Corn
Sj* ».» X t
sss >
130 MODELS
12 TO 48 FOOT DIAMETER BINS
CAPACITY FROM 1700 TO 75.000 BUSHELS
tailored T°o R n T C yoj; L R ET N E EED D s ES,GN *
The early English were struck by the notion that elves shot
at cattle with little bows and arrows, and that these arrow
heads could be worn to ward offilightning!
DON'T
CAUGHT
ORDER
FARM
Cert. Iroquois Alfalfa
Cert. Saranac Alfalfa
Cert. Cayuga Alfalfa
Cert. W-L305 Alfalfa
Cert. Vernal Alfalfa
Qert. Buffalo Alfalfa
Grasses
Maine Grown Certified Seed Potatoes
mu
BE
SHQRT!
YOUR SPRING
SEEDS NOW
Cert. Pennscott Red Clover
Cert. Ladino Clover
Cert, Garry Oats
Cert. Pennfield Oats
Cert. Clintland Oats
Erie Spring Barley
■+ J
T
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T
7
II
Sudax
AGE
BLEM