Toughest Bam Cleaner Ybu Can Buy Rugged Chain And Transmission Make It More Dependable SHOW-EASE STALL CO. 523 Willow Rd. Lancaster, PA Ph.(717)299-2536 A. C. HEISEY CECIL DAIRY SERVICE CAR >. c H ,p K FARM EQUIPMENT INC. RDiRt.274 CARL L. SHIRR RDI Vi Mi. South Rising Sun, MD , u o. Jonestown. PA Ph. (301) 658-6923 ph Ph - (71?) “5' 4526 PETERMAN FISHER BROTHERS FARM EQUIPMENT 136 W. High St. York Road Red Lion, PA Carlisle. PA Ph.(717)244-2178 Ph.(717)249-5338 8862-3406 Badger Barn Cleaners are built to pro vide more years of dependable, trouble free service. Cham has forged, hardened links with heavy flat bar connectors. No hooks to straighten, come unhooked, or snag. Heavy duty transmission with V belt drive features a one-piece cast frame and rugged drive gear built to last a lifetime. Husky box beam elevator is leak proof and a full 12-inches deep. Whether you’re thinking of replacing chain or installing a completely new system, see your Badger dealer. See Your Local Badger Dealer; fiRUMELLI’S FARM SERVICE Mechanics Grove Quarryville, PA Ph.(717)786-7318 Landfill fight costing more than expected PENRYN - The Save Our Soils Committee of Penn and Elizabeth Townships in Lancaster County has been working hard to cover an unexpected $2600 bill for the printing of bound volumes of hearing testimony required Eqsq Nursery Feeders JEFFERSON, lowa. - New from Ideal are single and double trough con finement nursery feeders for pigs. Models are available in stainless steel or heavy gauge -galvanized con struction. The new stainless steel models offer long-life rust and corrosion resistance. Made of heavy 304 stainless - - a low carbon, chromium nickel steel - they are protected by Ideal’s five year guarantee. The galvanized models are made of heavy gauge rust resistant G-90 galvanized steel. For more information, write: Ideal Livestock Equipment, P.O. Box 458, Jefferson, lowa, 50129. LLOYD E. KREIDER RDI Cochranville, PA Ph.(215)932-4700 PIKEVILLE EQUIPMENT INC. RO2 Oley, PA Ph.(215)987-6277 by the Commonwealth Court. The SOS Committee is appealing a county court decision that it must permit a sanitary landfill along Penryn Road. Reportedly, the appellate court requires that any party appealing a decision have all previous testimonies, etc. reprinted and rebound according to specifications set by the court. The court also stipulates how many copies must be printed. The committee already had $l3OO from donations in its treasury, which covered half the bill. And in the past month, another $7OO has come in donations from persons interested in keeping the land in question in agriculture. The committee is now asking Tor donations from the public for the remaining $6OO to finish paying off the bill. According to Scott Shenk, a committee official, any organizations or groups who want to learn more about the proposed landfill situation and what the committee is doing to fight it, may contact the committee and request that members of it show a group of informative slides and answer questions. “We’ll'be happy to meet with .them, answer questions, or do whatever is necessary to inform them and get their support,” Shenk said. He said that anyone who wishes to make a con tribution to help pay for the legal costs of the appeal may send a check to SOS Com mittee, P.O. Box 215, Penryn, Pa. 17564. Persons All the money-saving features found in Stormor Gram Bins can now be yours at a big savings You get • Rugged galvanized, heavy-gauge steel sidewalls • Exclusive roof Vac-U-Vents • Hill-and-Valley Bolting • Rock-solid Anchoring • Capacities to 152,000 bu It all adds up to the best gram bin for your money l The best is now specially priced. Come In M today for Stormor's Big Winter Discounts # m m mm # on the quality built Stormor Grain Bins. UMmM f #1 Quality Built to Last Longer Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 17,1977 can also call Shenk or committee chairman James Bachman for information. Residents of the two townships have been in action for over a year now fighting a sanitary landfill which a Harrisburg firm, R.E. Wright Associates, plans to install along Penryn Road, in the midst of both housing developments and farmland. Residents have protested that the landfill site is too close to Hammer Creek, that the area is too full of springs and limestone to avoid the Dairymen (Continued from Page 1) states Norman Kolb, New Holland Sales Stables. “And, horsemen are willing to pay top price for fancy hay. ’ ’ Ira Zartman, a hay nd straw dealer from Epl dta Rl, reports that much oi the hay and straw he is working with is coming from nor thern Pennsylvania and New York State. “I make several trips a week to upstate Penn sylvania and New York,” he reports. “The crop is poorer up there, but I’m still getting rid of it.” According to Zartman, there’s little a farmer can do but pay the price if he really needs the hay. N. Alan Bair, Lancaster County Extension agent, noted that the high price will mean some adjustment for dairy farmers. “Basically, it will hurt them financially,” he said, “because they don’t have a whole lot of choice in the matter. Our farmers will GRAIN EQUIPMENT, INC. Box 216, RDI2, York. PA 17406 Ph: (717) 755-2690 , danger of well pollution, that the added traffic of garbage trucks will be hard on their roads and a danger to their children, and that the land fill itself will generate dust, odor, rodents, and a general decline in property values around it. The zoning boards of both townships refused to permit the landfill, but R.E. Wright appealed these decisions, and won his case with the county court. The citizens are now ap pealing this decision with the Commonwealth Court. probably pay the price within reason.” Bair also noted that as long as dairymen balance their feed rations around the poorer quality hay, the animals will not be affected. He did add a precautionary note for farmers, saying that the poorer quality hay is going to mean forage testing. “They are probably going to have to forage test the purchased hay, so they will want to buy large enough quantities to make the forage testing economical.” Farmers contacted this week indicate that they will try to substitute com silage and haylage for as long as they can to avoid paying the prices. “I put up more com silage this year,” reports one York County dairyman, “and although I’m not feeding as much hay as I’d like to, I’m going to try to hold out. I may have to buy eventually, though. But, what are you going to do?” 25
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers