46 —Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 8,1979 Open beef show is held at South Mountain Fair SOUTH MOUNTAIN - The open beef cattle show was held at the South Mountain Fair on Sept. 5. Winners in each category were: CHAROLAIS: Champion Bull - Harry McLaughlin, Greencastle; Champion Heifer - Harry McLaughlin, Greencastle. HEREFORD: Champion Bull - Glesbrook Farm, Delmarva seminar EASTON, Md. - Forest and woodland owners on Delmarva are invited to participate in the Delmarva Forestry Seminar to be held on Saturday, September 15 from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. at the Tidewater Lin in Easton, Maryland. 'Die seminar is sponsored by the University of Maryland Cooperative Extension Service in cooperation with various governmental agencies and commercial forestry companies. According to Dr. John F. Kundt, Extension Forester for the University of Maryland, the Delmarva Forestry Seminar is for all forest and woodland owners on Delmarva who are in terested in the various management options for their property. Topics to be discussed will include forestry assistance, taxation and finances, wildlife and aesthetics of forestland and short term forest com modities including Christ mas trees and firewood. The seminar is divided into a morning and afternoon session with the morning portion dealing with forest management on a general level. After lunch, the af ternoon sessions will be intensive workshops on forestry assistance, financial and taxation, wildlife and aesthetics and short term forest com modities. Also featured at the seminar will be exhibits by various commercial foi □ Please send me color catalog on the Cherokee horse stock trailers and GN ffatbeds □ Please send me literature on Silo-Matic Feeding Systems I ADDRESS Waynesboro; Reserve Champion Bull - Glesbrook Farm, Waynesboro; David Shultz, Mechanicsburg, exhibited first place Sr. Bull Calf. Scottland Farms, Get tysburg, exhibited first and second place Summer Yearling Bulls and two bulls; Matt Young, Get tysburg, exhibited second place Junior Yearling Bull; Glesbrook Farm, forestry is slated Cost for the seminar is $2O per person which includes lunch and reference materials. For more in formation, contact the seminar coordinator, Ex tension Agent Don Osbum, SCS position filled WASHINGTON. D.C. - Secretary of Agriculture Bob Bergland recently named R. M. Davis as special assistant for international science and education and appointed Norman A. Berg to succeed Davis as administrator of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Soil Con servation Service. Both actions are effective Sept. 12. In his newly-created position, Davis will con centrate on natural resource management and con servation activities and the use of science and education to improve life in developmg countries. Davis, who will work under the supervision of Dale Hathaway, under secretary of agriculture for international affairs and commodity programs, has headed the Soil Conservation Service smce 1975. Davis is a native of Am brose, N.D., and a graduate of North Dakota State University, where he earned a B.S. in agricultural education in 1949. He began his SCS career as a soil conservationist in North Dakota in 1952. In 1968, he became the state con servationist in charge of SCS STATE. Waynesboro, also exhibited first place Junior Yearling Bull and first place Two Bulls. Champion Heifer - Scot tland Farms, Gettysburg; Reserve Champion Heifer - Spring Bottom Farms, Fairfield; Spring Bottom Farms, Fairfield, exhibited first place Junior Heifer Calf, first place Summer Yearling Heifer, and second place Two Year Old Heifer. P.O. Box 519, Delmarva Forestry Seminar, Easton, Maryland 21601 or call the Talbot County Extension Office at 301-822-1244 to make your reservations. operations in Pennsylvania. He was named the agency’s northeastern field representative in 1972 and became assistant ad ministrator of SCS m 1974. Davis has served ex tensively as a consultant m soil and water resources and agriculture to the govern ments of Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Tunisia. Berg is a native of Burlington, lowa. A career employee of SCS since 1943, he served m Idaho and South Dakota before moving to Washington, D.C. m 1960 as an assistant to the SCS ad ministrator. A graduate of the University of Minnesota, Berg holds a master’s degree in public ad ministration from Harvard University. He is chairman of the U.S. section, Great Lakes Land Use Reference Group of the International Joint Commission; a member of the secretary’s Coordinating Committee for the Soil and Water Resources Conservation Act; and a charter member and fellow of the Soil Con servation Society of America. ZIP. David Shultz,, Mechamcsburg, exhibited first and second place Sr. Yearling Heifers, sixth place Jr. Yearling Heifer, second place Jr. Heifer Calf and first place pair calves; Scottland Farms, Get tysburg, exhibited second place Summer Yearling Heifer and first place Jr. Get of Sire. Glesbrook Farm, Waynesboro, exhibited second and third place Junior Yearling Heifers. Matt Young, Gettysburg, exhibited third place Sr. Yearling Heifer and third place Jr. Heifer Calf; John Paxson, Gettysburg, exhibited third place Summer Yearling Heifer; Jeffrey Golden, Gardners, exhibited fourth and fifth place Jr. Yearling Heifers. SCOTISH HIGHLANDER: Champion Heifer - Wade Thoman, Hanover. HEY! HEY! HEY! HAVE YOU BEEN TOSSING THIS IN YOUR MIND: SAVING ENERGY NOW IS THE TIME TO ACT! ORDER YOUR THERMA-STOR "THE ENERGY SAVER" BY SEPTEMBER 15 YOU WILL SAVE $256 We Are Offering The DARI-KOOL THERMA’STOR HEAT RECOVERY SYSTEM The perfect example of energy conservation at its best Designed to fit any system THERMA»STOR produces all of the hot water your dairy needs, operates without the use of electricity or fuel, and makes and stores 2 temperatures of Hot Water—FßEE As an added feature, the THERMA«STOR can 71 IT, a. also be used to heat the milk room with forced hot air IH6 f HCrfllfl^OTOr Size High Temp No & Size Section Of Compr Capacity 33 Gal 57 Gal Chart shows typ cal temperatures (F) reached in the high temperature section of the THERMA«STOR HRS as determined by total compressor horsepower and operating time Temperatures and time shown assume proper refrigerant charge in system efficient compressor operation and no ore cooler in system TAKE ADVANTAGE OF: • Investment Credits • Less Wear and Tear on Bulk Tank Compressor • THERMA*STOR Unit Is All Stainless Steel ★ Service On All Makes Of Milk Tanks ★ All Work Guaranteed SHENK'S FARM SERVICE 501 E. WOODS DRIVE LITITZ, PA. 17543 PH: (717) 626-1151 Bulk Tanks • THERMA-STOR After 5 P.M. - Call Titus Burkholder - 717-859-1620 Our Service Trucks Are Radio Dispatched 24 Hr. Service Offered BULK BINS A Good Investment. We know your bulk feeding problems, and we know that Read systems can solve them We stand behind Read quality because Read engineers design for adaptability, economy and long-life It makes good sense to invest in strength and experience Let us show you Read Reliability. THOMAS FARM SYSTEMS, INC. 57 West Main Street Leola, PA 17540 Phone: (717) 656-2677 your local < 22^Steel Products dealer Compressor Oper Time (HR) (1) 3 H P (1)4 H P (1) (2) 3 H P (2)4 H P (2)5 H P THERMA-STOR HEAT RECOVERY SYSTEM System Ml Save You '4O-'lOO Per light Bill. (Every farmer that milks cows can save this) JSSitevjp £*PoOc« SHENKSFARM SERV|CE MILLPORT R 0 ■ AIRPORT INCASTER "1 STAUFFER Iroad
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers