Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, October 11, 1975, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    St. Louis Auction
Oct. 9,1975
Weekly Cattle
Review
Receipts: 8,600 Week Ago
8,900 Year Ago 7,700.
Compared to last Tuesday,
slaughter steers and heifers
strong to 50 cents higher,
with instances 1.00 higher.
Wholesale dressed beef
prices improved at mid week
and a stronger tone
prevailed in late live week
trade. However, increased
supply cows under pressure.
Cows 1.50-2.00 lower. Bulls
steady. Steer and Heifer
supply largely mixed Good
and Choice 900-1050 lbs.
Slaughter steers 25 percent
of receipts; No. 38! 34 20
percent; cows 18 percent and
feeders 35 percent.
SLAUGHTER STEERS:
Omaha
Oct. 9
Weekly 51 - Cattle -
Compared with the previous
weeks (Jose -
Slaughter steers 25-50
cents higher, Heifers 50-75
cents higher,, instances 1.00
up in late trading. Cows 1.00-
1.50 lower, and bulls weak.
Four Day Receipts 16,000
as compared 14,100 previous
week and 17,800 a year ago.
Slaughter steers ap
proximately 30 pet. week
total. Heifer 26 percent, cows
10 percent, and feeders for
Friday Auction 33 percent.
STEERS: Four loads
Choice and Prime 1216-1348
lbs. Yield Grade 3-4 52.00 at
midweek, two loads earlier
1157-1171 lbs. Yield Grade 3-4
51.50. Choice 1125-1250 lbs.
Yield Grade 2-4 closed 49.25-
50.50, load High - Choice 1192
lbs. 51.00. Choice 975-1125 lbs.
50.25. Mixed Good and
Choice 925-1200 lbs. 46.50-
48.25, Good 900-1250 lbs.
41.50-46.50, occasionally
46.75-47.00. Standard and low
GRAIN HANDLING EQUIPMENT
CARDINAL MECHANIZATION CONTRACTOR
NEWSHIPMENTOFTRANSPORT AUGERS & PORTABLE AUGERS.
E. M. HERR EQUIPMENT,
RDI, Willow Street
Choice 1000-1200 lbs. YG 2-4
48.50- 900-1000 lbs.
47.50- Mixed Good and
Choice 900-1100 lbs. 48.00
48.50. few Choice 850-900 lbs.
45.50-46.00. Good 900-1100 lbs.
42.00-46.00. Part load mostly
Good 1150 lb. Holsteins 41.00.
Standard and Good 950-1200
lbs. 37.00-39.00.
SLAUGHTER HEIFERS:
Choice 800-1050 lbs. YG 2-4
46.00-47.50. Mixed Good and
Choice 43.0046.00. Good 700
900 lbs. 38.00-43.00, with
Standard and Good 32.00
37.00. •
COWS: Utility 21.0023.50.
Cutter 18.0021.00. Canner
and Low Cutter 15.0018.00.
Thin Shelly 625-800 lb.
Canner 12.0014.00.
BULLS: YG 1-2 11001700
lbs. 22.0026.50.
Auction
- Good 38.50-40.50.
The average of LS-214,
detailed quotations, for
Choice 900-1100 lb. Steers this
week 48.90; Choice 1100-1300
lbs. 50.15.
HEIFERS: Load Choice
and Prime 959 lbs. Yield
Grade 3-4 48.00, moderate
volume same grade 950-1030
lbs. Yield Grade 3-4 47.50-
47.75. Choice 900-1025 lbs.
Yield Grade 2-4 46.0047.50.
Mixed Good and Choice 750-
975 lbs. 44.00-46.00. Good
37.50- Small lots
Standard and Low-Good
32.50-
COWS: Utility and
Commercial 20.00-23.00, a
few High - Utility and
Commercial 23.50-24.00.
Canner and Cutter 14.00-
20.00, Mixed Cutter and Low-
Utility 20.25-20.50. Shelly
Canner 10.00-13.00.
BULLS: Yield Grade 1 & 2
1400-1800 lbs. 23.00-27.00, a
few yield Grade 1 27.50-28.00.
MGI.
The CARDINAL Line
MOST CARDINAL EQUIPMENT ON STOCK
Sale
Report
Special Feeder
Calf Sale -
TIR-STATE (Abingdon) -
(Oct. 6, 1975).
There were 2,100 head
sold. All steers and heifers
were graded ■ by
Representatives of the
VDAC’s Division of Markets,
Livestock Section on VDAC
standards and sold by the
hundredweight.
STEERS: Choice & Good
300-400 lbs. 31.00-37.75,
mostly 34.00-37.00 ; 400-500
lbs. 31.00-40.00, mostly 35.50-
40.00• «WV6OO lbs 50-40.7*>,
mostly 35.50-40.75 Medium
300-400 lbs. 26.50-32.00; 400-
500 lbs. 26.00-32.00; 500-600
lbs. 28.50-32.50. Common 300-
400 lbs. 18.00-24.00; 400-500
lbs. 21.00-24.50; 500-600 lbs.
22.00-25.50.
HEIFERS: Choice & Good
300-400 lbs. 18.00-23.00; 400-
500 lbs. 19.00-27.50; 500-600
lbs. 22.50-25.25. Medium 300-
400 lbs. 16.00-17.50; 400-500
lbs. 18.00-23.75; 500-600 lbs.
22.00- Common 300-400
lbs. 14.00-15.50 ; 400-600 lbs.
15.00-
G arbage-to-Energy
More than 50 garbage-to
energ> programs are
currently operating, or are
ih the construction or plan
ning stages, throughout the
United States Almost all of
these systems call for the
recovery of steel cans, since
steel’s magnetic properties
make it the easiest material
to remove on a large scale
for recycling Also, the
removal of the metal in
creases the efficiency of the
remaining refuse as fuel and
reduces the amount of
material that must be land
filled
INC.
717464-3321
The Golden Fleece Tarnished
For Early Sheep Enthusiasts
Some 40 year*) before gold
fever struck on the American
West Const, a different kind
of money madness hit shi-ep
men in the Hast
As the l«th century melted
into the 19th. the regally ped
igreed and richly fleeced
Merino sheep of Spain pro
duced the finest wool in the
world The Spanish crown had
always canmly banned the ex
port of breeding stock, but
Napoleon's expeditions into
the Iberian peninsula changed
all that
As the Spanish government
crumbled about them, British
and American diplomats on
the spot bought from the best
flocks David Humphreys, the
U S minister to Portugal,
and William Jarvis, the min
ister in Madrid, sent home
entire flocks of the finest Yams
and ewes the two countries
had to offer
Eli Whitney, the famed in
ventor of the cotton gin, was a
man who appreciated fine
wool. too. After paying $3OO
for a ram and ewe. Whitney
wrote to a friend that they
dirty looking
were,
animals, but I have already
been offered four hundred for
the pair The demand is much
greater than can be supplied ’
Pennsylvania sheepmen
seemed especially infected by
the Merino craze, and between
1810 and 1816, helped stimu
late one of the wildest specula
tive binges in American agri
culture
" 1
New Idea’s Liquid Spreaders
Planning to “go liquid ?
New Idea offers 4 sizes, each
with open door or closed end.
• Choose from 800-, 1100-, 1500- or 2100-gallon tank
capacity.
• Big 135 c.f.m. pressure/vacuum pump, shielded
from weathgr.
• Air agitation through pipe system keeps solids in
suspension.
A real New Idea Heavyweight with 1/4" thick steel
walls, 5/16" on 2100 gallon model. Massive frames that
won’t twist or buckle. Optional plowdown or corn row
attachment. And a full year warranty
Stop in and
a look at it
L.L ECKROTH
FARM EQUIP, INC
New Ringgold
Ph 717 943 2367
N H FLICKER
& SONS INC
Maxatawny
Ph 215-683 7252
MILLER EQUIPMENT
Bechtelsville
Ph 215 845-2911
STANLEY’S
FARM SERVICE
RD
Klingerstown
Ph 717 648 2088
SHARTLESVILLE FARM EQUIPMENT
Shartlesville PA
215 488 1325
H Darnel Wenger, Prop
Lancaster Farming, Saturday. Oct 11. 1975
The demand for better wool in America lead to feaverish
speculation and many farmers paid high prices for imported
sheep.
Between 1810 and 1811,
some 20,000 Merinos were
shipped from Lisbon to
America, and they created a
furor Common wool from the
sheep then m the New World
was short stapled and coarse,
and sold for less than 40-cents
a pound. Menno wool in 1811
sold for 75-cents a pound
Two years later it was up to
$2 to $3 a pound, and in
January of 1816, Menno wool
reached a high of $7 06 on the
New York market From that
point, there was no way to go
but down, and in October of
1816, Merino wool was back
down to 68-cents a pound
A C HEISEY FARM
' EQUIP INC
ROl
Jonestown
Ph 717-865 4526
STANLEY A KLOPPINC
Bernville
Ph 215 488-1500
UMBERGERS MILL
RD4
Lebanon (Fontana)
Ph 717 867-5161
ZIMMERMAN’S
FARM SERVICE
Bethel
Ph 717 933 4114
A Bucks County, Pa., ob
server of the time noted, “The
Merino sheep mania raged in
this county from 1810 to 1815
Full-blooded Merinos sold as
high as $3OO to $5OO each and
in a few instances, they
brought SI OOO . . A man m
this county sold his wheat
crop, 200 bushels at S 3 a
bushel and gave the whole of
it for one sheep When the
fever subsided, these same
sheep dropped to $5 and $lO
As the speculative fever
came to an end, many far
mers, bitterly disappointed,
sacrificed their entire flocks
A butcher in Philadelphia re
ported buying an entire Mer
ino flock for a dollar a head
As the animals were herded
off to slaughter, the owner of
the flock pointed out one of
the rams to the butcher,' and
reported that it had been im
ported at a cost of $lOOO.
will establish my cove
lant between me and thee,
md thy seed after thee, in
heir generations, for an ever
asting covenant, to be a
3od unto thee, and to thy
,eed after thee.
TECHNICIANS -
DEALERS WANTED
for Lancaster County &
surrounding area.
CONTACT:
Aaron B. Stoltzfus
Aaron’s Semen
Supply
RDI, Box 277
Gap, PA 17527
717/442-4074
or
A GENETIC IMPROVER COMPANY
BUFFALO VALLEY TENN 38548
(615)858 2138
Dairy semen available
featuring
WKU Astro Leader Ike
Astronaut son out of Ist
Mature Cow in KY for Fat
Swampy Hollow Gay Danus -
H Gay Ideal son out of EX
Ivanhoe dau with over
200 QOO#M at 4 o%'
Lost-River Elevation Diamond
- RORAE son out of EX Arlmda
Chief dau
Nithside Starlite Roybrook
Starhte son out of Telstar
granddau
Fran-Lou Thunderbolt -
Ivanhoe Son out of EX-92
Marquis Dau
Hilfar Reflection Perseus - D
Reflection Emperor son out of
EX Citation R dau , R I leader
for Milk 1973
7