20 —Lancaster Farming, Saturday, January 5, 1974 Methane As the 58th annual Penn sylvania Farm Show gets un derway, a novel “energy” exhibit will be shown to this year’s visitors. It is a methane gas generator, otherwise known as “cow power,” and can be seen in die Farm Show cattle barn near the entrance to the cattle superin tendent’s office. This generator, or digester, produces methane gas from the interaction of anaerobic bacteria and manure. It is being shown by courtesy of Donald A. Harter, Area Resource Development Agent of the Cooperative Ex tension Service, and Lebanon County Agent Glenn E. Miller and Assistant County Agent Newton J. Bair, who developed the digester. With the current energy crisis, farmers are facing a combination of shortages and high prices for fossil fuels. Deriving energy from animal wastes has been con sidered by many U. S. resear chers to be too expensive for practical use. However, skyrocketing fossil fuel costs may now usher in the era of manure power. In a comprehensive article written for the Pennsylvania Township News. Don Harte explains that methane, like natural gas, can be used directly to fuel cookstoves, water heaters, SHOP AND COMPARE! AT YOUR SOLANCO EQUIPMENT DEALER Serving The Farm Community with Agriculture Products CONVINCE ’B9O YOURSELF! MAKE A DEMONSTRATION APPOINTMENT - - ■ d TODAY!! Generator refrigerators and gas lights. It can run a gas engine and generate electricity and it can also be compressed and carried in tanks to power'tractors. The potential power from animal wastes is enormous. Putting these wastes to work can provide us with the dual benefit of an energy source and a disposal system for pollutants, Harter says. Research has shown that the residue ( after gas production has the same nitrogen content as the raw waste. It does not lose any of its fertilizing value for crops. Harter writes that animal wastes total nearly two billion tons annually. In Pennsylvania, 700,000 milk cows alone produce an estimated 1.75 million tons of dry organic wastes yearly. The organic waste from 100,000 cattle has the potential of supplying the natural gas needs of 30,000 people at present rates of use. America has been slow in researching the , conversion of manure to methane gas, perhaps, because of our great abundance of fossil fuels. Now those days are over as we wait in line for gasoline that will shoot above 50 cents a gallon in the next few weeks. Harter tells us that producing methane from sewage sludge and animal waste has been a common practice in Europe since 1930. r%m Gets into your ay stem ■ (g BEHL® A. I. HERR £ BRO. To Be On The most successful research has been carried out at the Gobar Research Station in Ajitmal, India. Today in India there are more than 2,500 methane gas generators, mostly in rural villages and on farms. According to Harter, a Gobar designed manure digestor is currently being used on a dairy farm in Benson, Vermont. It can digest 200 pounds of manure daily, the quantity produced by Changes Asked For Livestock Weighing- Rules The U. S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), in material published in the December 27 Federal Register, proposed changes in the regulation relating to weighing of livestock under the Packers and Stockyards Act. The purpose is to clarify and update the regulation to fit present-day livestock marketing conditions. The proposal eliminates reference to scale tickets for live poultry as this is now covered in another section of the regulations. Also eliminated is the reference to National Bureau of Standards specifications for scale tickets _and reference to type-registering weighbeams since the regulations now require stamped or printed weights. Language is being added to exempt markets which use automatic weighing and recor ding equipment from issuing scale tickets when the weight value is recorded directly on the account of sale or other basic record provided to the seller or consignor. Requirements for correction tickets or slips would be deleted as this appears to be an un necessary requirement on the industry. Persons wishing to submit written data, views, or statements in connection with the proposal should file these in duplicate with the Hearing Clerk, USDA, Washington, D. C. 20250, by Jan. 26, 1974. The record in this matter is open to the public. Copies of the proposal may be obtained from the Information Officer, Packers and Stockyards Administration, USDA, Washington, D. C. 20250. 312 Park Ave, Quarryville, Pa. 17566 Ph. 786-3521 View At Farm Show about seven cows. The holding vessel is an old boiler which has a daily gas producing capacity of WHILE AT THE FARM SHOW STOP AND SEE THE AMERICAN MADE TIME PROVEN Automatic Calf Feeder at the S & S Distributor Display Located in the Cattle Barn. YOUNG BROS. NURS-ETTE SALES and SERVICI Ph. 717-548-2462 Peach Bottom, R.D. 1, Pa 17563 ★ Hoffman's Horse & Cattle Powders ★ Aureomycin Sulmet 700 Crumbles ★ /Baymix Warmer Crumbles ★ Shell Horse Warmer ★ Flameiess Gas Pig Brooders ★ Custom Canvass Work . New For Sweellix Horse Block AARON S. GROFF & SON Farm & Dairy Store H.D. 3. Ephrata, Pa. 17542 (Hinkletown) Phone‘.{s4-0744 Store Hours 7 A.M. to!) P.M. Closed Tues. & Sat. at 5:30 P.M. 11174, lURIITO EASTERN MILK PRODUCERS The dairyman in the northeast who does not be long to a strong, efficiently operated dairy co-op in 1974 cannot expect his interests to be ade quately represented. Every dairyman needs a solid dairy co-op. Eastern Milk Producers views the issues in ’74 to be: □ Achieving a fair milk price for all dairymen. □ Offering guaranteed, stable markets with mini- mum dues. □ Protecting blend prices by recouping pool losses resulting from milk adulteration and inadequate bonding laws. _ co-op m . t ? 52 consecutive, years em option, A^o-op^ r c * t .**■* ™ m market® aie Make Eastern your dairy co-op in 1974. Call 315-446-0730 or write: V EASTERN w MILK PRODUCERS 280 cubic feet. About 250 cubic feet of methane gas is equivalent to one gallon of gasoline. COOPERATIVE ASSOCIATION. INC. Kmne Road, Syracuse, New York 13214