TRY A CLASSIFIED oncaster Farming Photos for Sale f you’d like prints of any Lancaster Farming ihotographs, we’ll be happy to nake them for you. To order, ust complete the form below md mail or bring it to: Photo jepartment, Lancaster Panning, 22 E. Main St., ,ititz, Pa. 17543 The photo I want appeared in Ihe Lancaster Farming jated — vas on page the caption begins I would like to order the following prints: Number of Cost of »rints Size each Total 4x5 $1.50 5x7 2.00 Bxlo 2.50 Total order (Please add 6 pet. Pa. Sales Tax)- Please send remittance with order. Allow 10 days for delivery. Name Street. Town Zip State. Thank You FOR MAKING OUR ANNUAL SPRING SALE A HUGE SUCCESS 50 TRACTORS SOLD and 350 PIECES FARM EQUIPMENT |i \\ li ii I -ii IHTS Crawler 2275 AC B 500 Oliver 800 Corn Planter 710 NH Grinder Mixer 1250 mf d.sc' 700 North Grotfdale Road, Leola, Pa. 17540 PHONE: (717) 656-2321 Erosion Control Tips In the all-out push to produce more food this year, many farmers will be returning erosion-prone land to full production. The USDA Soil Conservation Service estimates 4.3 million “new” acres fit this category. “This marginal land can be productive this year and remain productive for the next generation if fanners conserve their resources,” says Darwin Kettering, Massey-Ferguson senior vice president for operations. He offered these tips from Massey-Ferguson agricultural engineers: and 1. Have a conservation plan. Take time to survey your fields and plan your cultivation practices. Plant crops suited to the land. Don’t plant row crops on inclined land, unless you plant a nurse crop, like rye, to hold the soil. 2. Use the most effective soil and water conservation methods. For dry and sandy Aerial Ladder Equipped FARM PAINTING We Spray it on and Brush It In! FOR FREE ESTIMATES CALL COLLECT 717-393-6530 OR WRITE HENRY K. FISHER 2322 Old Phlla. Pike Lancaster, Pa. 17602 M. M. WEAVER & SONS soils where moldboard plowing can cause wind erosion, adapt a form of minimum tillage. (You’ll save fuel, too.) Where water runoff causes erosion, caddycorner plowing is best, creating cup-shaped soil boxes that hold water. Other modes of conservation tillage; contour farming, strip cropping, and rotation planting. 3. Use ground cover. Plant a nurse crop to hold the soil through spring rains. Use a cover crop to prevent winter wind and water erosion. Rye, oats, and other small grains can be harvested in the early summer or grazed through the spring. 4. Never plant steep, hilly land to anything but grass or trees. Choose a good-rooting pasture grass mix like fescue and bluegrass. 5. Use irrigation water efficiently. Puddling and run-off run up your water bill and waste irreplaceable topsoil, too. 1974 1975 1976 *■ 1977 1978 1979 1980 MF26O FORAGE HARVESTER LEFT SIDE DELIVERY 1 ▼ MORE CAPACITY ■ T MORE WORK I ▼ MORE PROFIT 9 OPTIONAL 3r tractor cab controls FAMOUS MASSEY FERGUSON ENGINEERING AND DUALS TRACTOR CLEARANCE (2 ROW) The MF 260 forage harvester is the one you need today You can keep using the MF 260 as your tractorsize increases Since it’s a Massey Ferguson you can depend on the MF 260 for years of service From MF 6. Cooperate in the national “Produce and Protect” program spon sored by the USDA Soil Conservation Service. Consult your local SCS technician or county Ex tension agent for further information tailored to your own farm. Erisman Gets Sales Award Mr. Gordon Erisman, Agent for the Farm Family Life Insurance Company has qualified for the Company’s Rookie Club and $750,000 Production Club based on his 1973 production. He was recognized for these achievements at the Third Annual Mid-Winter Sales Conference held recently in New Hampshire. At this time he was named one of the top ten agents Companywide for 1973. Mr. Erisman became an agent for Farm Family in January of 1973 and was an honor graduate of the Career Agents Training Conference given by the Company. Prior to his present position, he was a sheet metal worker. He and his wife Ann Marie have four children. The Erisman’s live in Columbia, Pennsylvania, TRY A CLASSIFIED THE FORAGE HARVESTER BUILT FOR TOMORROW'S BIG TRACTORS TODAY THE GREAT ADJUSTMENT Lancaster Farming, Saturday, Mar. 23.1974— USDA Study Examines Differences in U.S., Chinese Agriculture Grain output in the United States and the People’s Republic of China is about the same, but because China has roughly four times more people, it emphasizes grain for human consumption, rather than for use as livestock feed. This and other differences between U.S. and Chinese agriculture are pointed out in a study released today by the U. S. Department of Agriculture. In China, 55 percent of total grain area is planted to food grains, while in the United States, 65 percent is in feed grains. Diets in the two countries differ accordingly: starches ac count for almost 80 percent of average daily caloric intake in China, but for only 23 percent in the United States. U.S. crop yields, benefiting from a high level of capital and technological inputs, are generally twice as high as yields in China, where agriculture is labor-intensive. One tractor per 58 sown acres is available in the United States, but m China, there is one tractor for every 2,000 or more acres. U. S. farmers use about four times more fertilizer to raise crop yields. China, with half as many cattle, uses them primarily for draft purposes instead of for meat and livestock products. There are nearly three times more hogs and sheep in China despite the low levels of feed grain production. Farm commodities are more important for earning foreign exchange in China, accounting for 35 percent of the country’s imports and over 50 percent of its exports. For the United States, these shares are about 15 and 18 percent, respec tively. A copy of “Agriculture in the United States and the People’s Republic of China, 1967-71,” FAER-94, is available free on postcard (please include zipcode) or telephone (447- 7255) request from the Office of Communication, U. S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. 20250. Manure Use The use of livestock and poultry manure has always been a common practice in this part of the country; this continues to be a very good fertilizer practice and this year will reduce the amount of commercial fertilizer needed; However, I’d like to caution gardeners and fanners about the danger of burning crops and plants with too much poultry manure. This material is much higher in nitrogen than livestock manure and will bum plants and seeds if applied too liberally. Some kinds of poultry manure that is dry and has been protected from leaching may contain as high as 90 pounds of nitrogen per ton of manure; wet and sticky poultry manure usually runs about *3O pounds of nitrogen per ton. Poultry manure applications should not exceed 4 to 5 tons per acre. The common rate of 10 to 15 tons per acre, as with livestock manure, will surely cause trouble, and especially in dry weather. Go easy with poultry manure applications. .IWf«M*S E T MEAI • MORE MOW TO MADISON SILOS Div. Chromalloy American Corp. 1070 Steinmetz Rd. Ephrata, Penna. 17522 Ph. 733-1206 LOCAL DEALERS Frank Snyder Akron Caleb Wenger - Quarryvdle 548-2116 Landis Bros. Inc. Lancaster 393-3906 Lebanon Sollenberger Farm Supply Centerport, Pa. Ph. 215-926-7671 19 859-2688 Carl L. Shirk 867-3741