Know Where the Activities Will Be? Read the Farm Women Calendar. (MMB&AgOEWT 9 East Main Street, Lititz, PA 717/626-4721 ROYSTER fgj BONANZA SOYBEAN SPECIAL With Extra Manganese GUARANTEED ANALYSIS TOTAL NITROGEN (N) 4% AVAIL. PROS. ACID (P 205) 16% SOLUBLE POTASH (K2O) 10% Calcium (Ca) 3% Sulfur (S) 2% Magnesium (Mg) 1% Boron (B) 0.02 % Copper (Cu) 0.05 % Iron(Fe) 0.10 % Manganese (Mn) Molybdenum (Mo) 0.0005% Zinc (Zn) 0.05 % ROYSTER COMPANY 500 Running Pump Ed. Lancaster, Pa. 17601 Phone 717-299-2541 (Richland) 717-866-5701 BALANCED NUTRITION VS. MGH SUPPLEMENT COSTS we got ricked. Everyone wants to be sure of balanced nutrition. Leader” I ®. With Mol-Mix, your supplement costs are After all, it’s the performance of your herd that means a good investment toward the performance and prof profits for you. With Mol-Mix® liquid supplements, its you will receive in the future, your supplement dollar not only helps guarantee your This spring, make Mol-Mix liquid supplements a part cattle’s performance, but also helps guarantee your of your feeding program We’re not talking about net profits. Mol-Mix guarantees the moistures and something that will only add to your feeding costs... sugars in our standard formulations and ingredients we’re talking about the bottom line, like com distiller’s solubles, condensed fermented corn extractives, phosphoric acid, ammonium Mol-MhC polyphosphate and our unique “buffered release s—-——■■■■g formula provide the balanced nutrition so essential supplements for top milk production. And you know what that • Ift MAI 7 lIIIDTihI means for your profits. JUflll L, IVlnlfilN Even today, with so many supplements compromis ing quality for cost, Mol-Mix still includes the very NEW HOLLAND RDI ingredients that continue to keep us “The Liquid PHONE 717-354-5848 4 -16-10 Floriculture MT. JOY, Pa.—The Mt. Joy Vocational School hosted the Lancaster County FFA Floral Design contest on April 25. Taking part in the event were the Mt. Joy, Willow Street, and Brownstown vo-tech schools. The three advisors from the schools, Jennifer Brown, Brownstown; Cindy Mur phy, Willow Street; and Dan Helwig, Mt. Joy, ran the contest. The competition consisted of several parts, including floral design, plant iden tification, and a 50-question test. The top individual for the contest was Shelly Heim, Columbia, Mt. Joy Vo-Tech; Jim Wert, Landisville, Mt. Joy Vo-Tech; KimGoodhart, 2% contest held - Columbia R 2, Mt. Joy Vo- Tech; Linda Smith, Columbia, Mt. Joy Vo-Tech; and Felicia Gordner, Garden Spot." For team effort, Mt. Joy garnered the championship trophy while Brownstown took second and Willow Street took third. Judges for the event were Betty Kloidt of Kloidt’s Flowers, Columbia; and Warren Mueller, of Mueller’s Flowers, Elizabethtown. The contest sponsor was the Lancaster County Future Farmer’s of America. route IN GREAT WITH EGGS! About 80 calories each. Nolt’s Charolais wins show NEW HOLLAND, Pa. - Titus Nolt of Manheim R 1 exhibited a pen of six uniform Charolais beef animals to grand champion honors in the semi-annual Fat Steer Show held at the New Holland Sales Stables on April 21. The Lancaster County cattle feeder also consigned the champion pan of Herefords. A special sale followed the show, with a top bid of $43 being offered for the grand champion lot which averaged 1220 pounds per head. Buyers were Cross Brothers Meat Packers, Inc. of Philadelphia. Henry and Jim Kettering Food production (Continued from Page 301 also be made. High crop yields will feed more people, and can be achieved through a four-pronged program that includes pest control, fer tilization, genetic Lancaster Farming, Saturday. Ai Bergland wants fair policy WASHINGTON, D.C. - Secretary of Agriculture Bob Bergland told a group of farm editors Monday that they mutually share the same concern as he in wanting to formulate a national food policy that is acceptable and fair to far mers and equally acceptable to 215 million American consumers. Addressing the annual spring meeting of the Newspaper Farm Editors at a luncheon here, Secretary Bergland said: “Your responsibilities as com municators encompass the whole spectrum of society all those who use food and fiber and that includes everyone. “You are, as I am,” the secretary said, “concerned more than with the problems of fanners, and seeing to it that our agricultural production is maintained to meet food commitments at home and abroad. “We are also concerned with a workable food policy and the effect of that policy on our economy, our quality of life, the availability of food at reasonable prices for consumers, the use of energy, and our in- of Lititz R 3 consigned the reserve grand champion pen - a group of Angus cattle which averaged 1287 pounds per head. Another of their entries finished second in the Hereford division of the show. Titus Beam of Elverson won the top two placings in the Holstein class. Cattle feeders from the area consigned 47 lots for the semi-annual show, which was judged by Larry and Rich Marshall, buyers for Cross Brothers. Prices paid for the animals ranged from the high of $43 to a low of $39.60 per hundredweight. manipulation, and cultural management, Dr. Fellows said. Plant proteins, esp cially from legumes and pulses, can provide a sub stantial part of a person’s necessary protein requirement. Animals must be used more rationally and con scientiously in converting plant material into human food products, stated Dr. Fellows. Meat and milk products from various animals provide desirable food that is high in the essential amino acids commonly low or lacking in today’s plant food. Forage crops and waste products from grains and other sources must continue to be converted into human food by animals, too. Non-arable areas may be made food productive through the rational use of animals, he said. In this way, more effective production of human offd could be achieved throughout the world, both directly through animal products and in directly through improved plant production. Fortified iril 30.1977 Robert Bergland temational trade balances,” he added. Bergland pointed out that the professional stature of the nation’s farm editors has risen in recent years with a growing interest and awareness of the consuming public in the importance of a food policy acceptable to both farmers and con sumers. He emphasized that the “Department of Agriculture will not be a captive fiefdom of some special interest group’’ as long as he is secretary. Following are the top three placings for each of the four classes: Mixed Breed 1. Titus Nolt, 2. Ellsworth Rohrer, Quarryville; 3. Arthur Becker, Mount Joy. Angus 1. Henry and Jim Kettering, 2. Carl Eshleman, Green castle; 3. Aaron Hurst, East Earl. Hereford 1. Titus Nolt, 2. Henry and Jim Kettering, 3. Willis Martin, Lebanon. Holstein 1. and 2. Titus Beam. and synthetic food will play an ever-increasing role in meeting food demands in the future, Dr. Fellows con tinued. Finally, research and education into the problems of population and demand and supply for food must be accelerated, he said. Meanwhile, systems of law, government, education, transportation, com munications, and property ownership must adjust themselves accordingly. The primary goals of these structures should be to stabilize human population growth and to enhance the quality of human life within the physical limitations of the Earth, concluded Dr. Fellows. 37