outstanding COLLEGE PARK, Md. Agriculture graduates from Milwaukee, Wis. and Robert Two Extension agricultural the University of Maryland G. Miller of Hebron agents from central at College Park. (Wicomico County) was Maryland and the Eastern Robert L. Jones of elected as the Northeast Shore—have been elected to Westminster (Carroll region director, positions of leadership by the County) was named Jones served as NACAA National Association of president-elect at the 60th vice-president last year, and County Agricultural Agents' annual NACAA meeting last he was general chairman for Both are 1950 College of week (Sept. 28-Oct. 2) in the organization’s 1973 an- >«VWfvyMKvJy-i;- ,^?- w ' Why you should add IK tmCOKY RR6IH to your feeding program With feed at 51 per pound and cattle selling at 350 a pound, an investment of less than $l.OO per head for AUREO S 700 and AUREOMYCIN® returned $5.75 in five commercial trials. When cattle arrive at your feedlot, they’ve been stressed and exposed to a variety of disease organisms Start them with a con ditionmg feed containing AUREO S 700 and feed it for the first 28 days. AUREO S 700 maintains weight gains in the presence of shipping fever Then, follow up with feeds con GEHMAN FEED MILL INC. Denver, Pa GRUBB SUPPLY CO. Elizabethtown, Pa Phone 609/692-4400 Distributors of American Cyanamid Animal Health & Feed Products BROADWAY, VA. • SELBYVILLE, DEL. • LEWISBURG, OHIO • VESTAL, N. Y. • LITITZ, PA. Jones and taming AUREOMYCIN chlortetra cycline AUREOMYCIN not only provides for excellent growth and feed efficiency, but also helps re duce losses from liver abscesses, foot rot and bacterial diarrhea For complete detail's contact any of the feed manufacturers listed below, or call or write The Fox Company Miller named extension '■ y ■ /v -%o'a<A , «s i > •>^‘gcoeowo»;o6cww&ay><^^>vgw»- EARL SAUDER, INC. New Holland, Pa. STEVENS FEED MILL, INC Stevens, Pa agents nual meeting, held in Baltimore. Miller had been named to a two-year term as vice-director for the Nor theast region at the Baltimore meeting. The new NACAA president-elect has been the Carroll County Extension chairman since - 1964. He came to the county in 1957 after a two-year stint as assistant county agent in Dorchester County, on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. A Harford County native, Jones grew up on a farm near Street and graduated in the vocational agriculture curriculum at Highland high school. After earning the B.S. degree in general agriculture from the University of Maryland at College Park in 1950, he began his career in Ex- :v v-‘ .. 'sV Trademarks American Cyanamid Company WENGER’S FEED MILL, INC. Rheems, Pa. WOLGEMUTH BROS, INC. Mount Joy, Pa 'V' • r ,4 * S S V* ' Lancaster Farming, Saturday, 6ct. 11,1975—53 Commodity symposium slated for spring symposium. They will have an opportunity to see fir sthand the action on the trading floor of CUT, the nation’s oldest and largest commodity exchange. Also on the agenda will be visits to processing plants and marketing facilities, plus question-and-answer sessions with marketing and trading specialistss. Symposium participants are selected on the basis of their records of ac complishment in 4-H by the Cooperative Extension Service, which conducts the commodity marketing program. tension as an assistant . * n addition to expense-paid county agent in Prince ,P S *° Clucago f° r *bc Georges County. winners and partial reim- Jones is also a past bursement for their president of the Maryland chaperons, the Board of Association of County Trade offers medals of honor Agricultural Agents and *° a ? mal )y as f our former regional chairman of numbers in each county the national organization’s conducting commodity program committee. He was production and marketing Maryland’s winner of the uctivities. All awards are .NACAA Distinguished arranged and announced by Service Award in 1971. fhe Natioanl 4-H . Service Miller, the new Northeast Committee, region director for the Nearly 85,000 4-H mem- NACAA, has a 24-year hers from 9to 19 participate career in the University of ui loam-by-doing activities Maryland’s Cooperative designed to give them an Extension Service, uiside view of the market- Currently chairman of the place. 4-H’ers explore basic Wicomico County Extension marketing concepts as they staff, he has been county apply to commodities sold in agent at Salisbury since 1955 cash markets and in and an assistant county future markets of major agent in Cecil and Wicomico commodity exchanges. They counties, successively, from apply their market know -1951 to 1955. how to ongoing 4-H projects A native of western in grain and crop production, Maryland, Miller grew up on forestry, livestock and farm near Accident (Garrett poultry production, food- County). He holds a B.S. nutrition, farm management degree in agricultural an d consumer education, education from the More information on the University of Maryland at program is available from College Park and an M.S. in county extension agents extension education from North Carolina State University. Miller received the “Excellence in Extension” award in 1973 from the College of Agriculture alumni chapter of the University of Maryland Alumni Association- International. He was the Maryland winner of the Distinguished Service Award from the National Association of County Agricultural Agents in 1970; he is a past winner of the NACAA’s Geigy award for agricultural leadership, and he placed third in 1972 in a national contest for newspaper column-writing sponsored by the NACAA CHICAGO - America’s role in feeding a hungry world will get a lot of attention at the 25th National 4-H Commodity Marketing Symposium to be held here Feb. 29- Mar. 3, 1976. The symposium is spon sored annually by the Chicago Board of Trade, donor of awards in the national 4-H commodity marketing program. Top 4-H’ers from as many as 39 states are eligible for expense-paid trips to Chicago to attend the np UDDER IMPROVERS THE Code HlBB3 H 1932 HlBBl H 2502 H 2510 I FOR STRENGTH & CAPACITY! H 2389 H 1958 H 2457 H 2536 H 2477 Treasure Norman .Sunshine Stockpiles of uranium are getting low It’s a space-age fuel, and more new nuclear power plants are increasing the demand for it. Prospec tors have to look farther to find it Mining companies have to spend more to produce it Between now and the end of the century, the United States will need another 15 to 2 2 million tons of uranium, to add to present stockpiles, to use as power plant fuel According to some experts, nuclear power plants may generate up to 60 percent of the nation’s energy demand by the end of the century. V. , .V.V//.VAV/A , AVAV.V>.O.*A*AWJ Av»v/«v«v**v«v»v*v*»«v«y»y«y*v»v^ SIRES Name RPT Milk R Maple Bob Bootmaker Fond Tom Demand + 611 +1321 +lO6l +lOl5 +1291 99% 76% 99% 54% 64% Fond Billy Frasea 75% 42% 44% 46% 62% +920 +749 +706 +827 +959 Uranium Low DBS Fat +2l +27 +2B +ll +l7 +5O £ +93 $ +BO ;i;i +64 iS -83 £ +7l $ +36 g +55 $ +55 :£ +92 8 +27 -5' +2l +l3 +5O
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers