Farm by Dick Wanner This writer, along with some 50 other farm writers and broadcasters, spent a few days last week in Dekalb, Illinois, as the guest of Dekalb Agresearch Inc., producers of hybrid corn, sorghum and wheat seed as well as hybrid layers. The occassion was Dekalb’s annual communications days conference. The assembled journalists talked to company officials, toured the research farms and witnessed the awarding of three Dekalb Oscars in Agriculture. Oscars are presented each year to a farm newspaper writer, a farm magazine writer and a farm broadcaster. This year’s winners were Don Razee, managing editor of the California Farmer magazine, San Francisco; Cliff Adams, farm service director of radio station KMA, Shenandoah, Iowa; and Dick Wanner, Lancaster Fanning editor. Several Dekalb officers reported on crop conditions across the country, using information -supplied by company seedmen on their particular areas. As ex a* <*o. C° EVERY WEDNESDAY IS % ran* DAIRY JBSt DAY AT NEW HOLLAND SALES STABLES, INC. If you need 1 cow or a truck load, we have from 100 to 200 cows to sell every week at your price. Mostly fresh and close springing Holstems. Cows from local farmers and our regular shippers including Marvin Eshleman, Glenn Fite, Gordon Fritz, Blame Hoffer, Dale Hostetler, Bill Lang, H. D. Matz, and Jerry Miller. V SALE STARTS 12:30 SHARP JX % *LJ PUBLIC SALE SATURDAY, SEPT. 28,1974 FAIR VIEW FARM & STABLES Turnpike Road, three miles west of Elizabethtown, Pa. FARM AND CHICKEN EQUIPMENT Furniture, 10.00 a.m. Real Estate, 2.00 p.m. REAL ESTATE consisting of Approx Vh acres of Field. Trees and Spring with a lot of Frontage on' Hard Road "A good quiet spot in the country" Will be sold at Fair View Farm & Stables 200 p m Real Estate location Turnpike Road from Elizabethtown turn left at first road after passing “Fair View Farm & Stablesturn left at next road, see Sale Sign Oliver 0 C 3 Crawler with Loader JD Hay Conditioner 14 Rubber tired Flat Wagon I H 28 disc Harrow Spike Harrow T Cultipacher D B Rubber tired 4-bar Sidedelivery Rake Circular Saw Frame for A C -B, Trailer Axle, Ford Tractor Jack N 1 12 A M Spreader w/Extra New Tire 4-hole Hog Feeder Grindstone, Circular Saw Blade. Wheel Weights for A C Metal Water Tub Small Tractor with Hydraulic Lift and Scoop to clean out chicken pits Wire Cages for 5,000 chickens, Cage Troughs Metal Chicken Nests Chicken Feeders, 2 Egg Carts, Metal Feed Bins Chicken Crates. 55- gal Drums Herrmatic Cage Feeder (self propelled) Berry Boxes Window Sashes, Double Wash Tubs Old Doors STALLION TWIN-7, Mower Small Trailer Shaves Single and Double trees Horse Collars Hay Hook Straw Cutter Fruit Drying Pan Old Heatrola (Oak Bengal 460), Milk Cans Elec Stove Desk roll top Old Cupboard Crib Coffee Table Lamps many other items Mr. & Mrs. Melvin Ressler Aucts.: GEORGE E. STONE, JR., Bainbridge, Pa. JOHN D. KILMER, Manheim, Pa. Clerks: STONE & REED. “No Sale Too Large or Too Small, We Handle Them All. ’ ’ For your sale call us. Food Stand: Sequoia Riders 4-H Club '•J'Ws.W V-»'» » « • »> •*» r »_r CT V >rVr.v •'V Writers Tour Dekalb Facility pected, prospects in general, especially in the Midwest, were for grain crops markedly under the predictions of earlier in the year. Late planting because of wet fields was a cause, drought was another factor, and early frost provided a triple weather “whammy” for many parts of the Mid west. Growing conditions in the' Northeast, however, were generally acknowledged to have been favorable. The nation’s seed crop, of course, is Dekalb’s main area of concern and their main area of expertise. The com seed crop will be down from last year but supplies should be adequate, we were told by Carroll Christensen, the company’s vice president for seed marketing. “There’s no cause for panic,” Christensen said, “but there is a real need for urgency. Farmers who don’t order their seed supplies early may find themselves without anything to put in the ground next spring.” “Throughout our industry, the output of seed com will be down about 26 percent this New Holland, Pa. Terms by: year," Christensen noted. “Supplies were hurt this year when farmers were forced to replant their fields two or three times because of wet weather. And we were hurt by the drought, too, just like other crops. Drought reduced the national com crop by about 26 percent, and it reduced the seed crop by about the same amount. "Industrywide production this year was expected to total about 20 million bushels and we expected to have a six million bushel carryover from last year. Instead, we find ourselves with a 14.8 million bushel crop, and a five million bushel carryover. We’ll also get some seed ‘coming out of the cracks’. It’s out there in warehouses, in barns, in rail cars. We don’t know where it is, but it’s there, and a tight year brings it out. It should add another 300,000 bushels or so to the available seed supply. “Normally, we use about 20 million bushels of seed com in this country every year, so we’re going to have just enough to meet the demands for the 1973 crop. It will be more expensive seed, but it will be available for the farmer who orders it early. The supply and demand situation will have something to do with the higher cost, of course. But the big factor will be the fact that seed companies simply had to pay more this year to produce a bushel of seed com. And our prices have to reflect those higher costs.” Some other highlights of the two-day event are recapped below. CONSIGNMENT SALE WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2 9;30 A.M. Location; Vz mile North of Route 23 on North Maple Ave. in Leola, Lancaster Co., Pa. Corn Binders, Corn Pickers, Harvesters, Silo Fillers, 300 pcs of Panelling, 15 insulated new house windows, insulation, large variety of used Lumber _ ~ Tractors, Farm Machinery, Horse Drawn Implements, New Tools, Lumber, etc., etc. We have buyers for hay and straw. We sell on Commission DAVID H. GOOD 717-656-9024 F. Snyder, R. Martin, C. H. Wolgemuth, Auct. Next Sale Wednesday, November 6 NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS The Dekalb corn physiology through the development of proiifics research program includes a number (multiple eared plants) as shown by of projects designed to increase the Dr. Ron Castleberry, Dekalb research productivity of the corn plant such as agronomist ■ Two-Eared Com Research Com growers and com researchers alike have long waited the day when multiple eared com would become a reality. Lancaster Farming. Saturday, Sept. 21.1974 DeKalb recently an- been one of the big nounced that some of their challenges with research research and testing work on work on prolific corns in the proiifics or multiple eared past. Many of the hybrids com looks very promising, having the prolific tendency Dr. Basil Tsotsis, director of will produce two or more com research, explains that ears at low and sometimes maintaining a second good moderate planting densities, ear at high populations has (Continued on Page 54] PUBLIC SALE OF FARM EQUIPMENT TUESDAY, SEPT. 24,1874 At 12 O’clock -Located 5 mile east of Elizabethtown, alone Harvest Road. Take Elizabethtown Road to Dnimheller Garase, go north on Trail Road to Harvest Road. From Colebrook go south to Harvest Road. Watch for JOHN DEERE 2520 DIESEL 700 hrs. Fully Equipped J.D. F 325 Auto. Reset Plow Allis Chalmers WD-45 wide front end. A.C. manure loader, J.D. No. 34 com harvester, J.D. 494 four row com planter, N.H. 68 Hayliner baler (w) bale thrower, J.D. 30’ elevator, J.D. No. 953 running gears (w) bed, A.C. side mounted mower; N.H. 404 crusher, M.H. No. 36 rake, M.H. Spreader PTO, Kil Bros, gravity bin (w) 6 T. running gears, M. M. transport disc, Case spring harrow, Case 9’ cultipacker, N.H. blower, 32’ silo pipe, J.D. goose neck, N.I. wagon (w) flat bed, 3 pt. cultivator, weeder, I.H. potato digger, J.D. model 14 chain saw, 2-Wheel Horse Tractors - 6 h.p. & 7 h.p. both (w) electric starters & mowers, Toro 920 tractor & mower. Simplex 7 h.p. mower (w) elec, starter, Wizard riding mower, Wizard 22” mower, Merri tiller, Eliminator high pressure washer, 3 hydralic cylinders, air compressor, tractor chains, anti-freeze, log chains, motors, elec, fence chargers, dehorner, cyclone seeder, sizing boxes, used tires, 9’ truck bed, wheelbarrow, 275 gal. tank, 55 gal. drums, shop vac., liquid sup. feeder. Sunbeam clippers, treated posts, forks, tools, Surge alamo 30 plus vacuum pump, 2 Surge milking units, S. S. buckets, strainer, Watkins jet sprayer, milk cans lathe (w) motor, fertizler, Barn Dri, picnic table, Vesper coal heater, duo-therm heater, many more articles. 34 TON HAY 7 TON STRAW SALE BY Thomas C. and Jeon Koser Aucts. Raymond Miller Rufus Geib Food by Locust Lane Chapel Not responsible for accidents Wf* ■» > t * r •*> «£*^-y-£v 53 ~, v j.