Finable, Srtaday, July 19,1900 CORN DOESN'T NEED TO BE DRY TO FEED LIVESTOCK. WHY DRY IT? SIX YEARS AGO YOU OULPN'T HAVE SOLD E A HARVESTORE ... OW I OWN TWO OF THEM!" “I really like the ease of handling the corn compared to drying. When! took my dry corn to the feed mill for rolling and mixing, I rarely got my own back. Now I can feed my own corn out of the HARVESTORE® all year long and that means a lot to me!”. “I have a batch dryer that I previously used for processing home-grown shelled corn. I dry 6000 bu. less corn per year and with drying costs and labor, that doesn’t spite me at all! Now I keep that 6000 bu. of corn in my HARVESTORE® . There is no more babysitting the dryer and getting up at all hours of the night when I store my com in the HARVESTORE 9 .1 close the hatch and my corn crop is stored, processed, and ready to feed out of the HARVESTORE® for my entire herd until next corn harvest.” “I eliminated the feed man from all the operations involved in handling corn. Ail I buy from him is soybean meal. Five tons lasts me two months.” “There is no comparison to feeding High Moisture Com with dry com. My cows really do eat High Moisture Corn better. When I fed dry corn to my cows, in the spring when they went to pasture, they would back off the dry corn. With the HARVESTORE® High Moisture Corn, my cows eat as much as they did in the winter.” m «V Penn-Jersey HARVESTORF NEW HOLLAND, PA 17557 See Page 12 For OPEN HOUSE Featuring New Swine Installation ' - SAVINGS WITH A HARVESTORE UNIT ARE OFTEN GREATER THAN THE PAYMENTS P.O. BOX 7 ' a* * 9 * DONALD G. HOFFER LEBANON, PA Systems, Inc. Phone 717-354-4051
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers