B2—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 7,1981 LITITZ America s - corn imports by 20 percent in a decade farmers .will be required to help That's a pretty tall order and it the nation reduce foreign energy sounds like a gasohol saleman’s Ice-damaged trees need immediate eare LIMA Ice storms can do considerable tree damage Should one tut this winter knowing what to do and how to do it will mean the difference between saving your favorite tree or chopping it up for firewood. Greatest storm injury is likely to occur on the faster growing trees These mclude poplars, maples, willows, black locust, and Chinese and Siberian elms Stronger species are oak, sycamore, and honeylocust If you’re faced with the job of straightening a toppled tree or mending the wounds of broken or split branches James J McKeehen, Delaware County Extension Agriculture Agent suggests the following first-aid treatment. Remove all broken branches Do all cutting with sharp Adams to hold beef meeting GETTYSBURG Beef cow-calf producers will have an opportunity to hear Lester Burdette, Penn State extension livestock specialist speak on “Feeding and Managing the Cow Herd” on Tuesday, February 10 at 7 30 p.m at the Specialists in Cali METAL Dairy Automation BUILDINGS ACOm CHA ,J LES Madison® Equipment JOHM " S j fIN silos ■ .'ifUtfll VI jll R D 1 Chromalloy Blil»l r I l Central City . a n , ■/irlliillir lnl pa Manure Bank rSi «alco II ArK * whi,eyourev,s, t |n s BoddiiiQChopper I I us wc •< be happy to talk II to you about a 1 ■ I plan - either buy or lease mm m - pjWTJTfJI'g that will (it your special Al A UIIDE CmmASaAI situation And that could BSAKABi ■■*^**™“"** e "AUGGIE ” and trouble °: me HANDLING Mbwr, Blender, F«*d«rs ' I EQUIPMENT I 30% LIQUID NITROGEN I | BY THE TRAILER LOAD OR ( | BY THE TON | I • Sprayers & spraying service | | • Poly N liquid corn starter 10-34-0 i f • Premium corn starters | | • Bulk blends to your specifications | | • Urea & Amonium Sulfate | | • Spreaders & spreading service | I • Limestone | I • SALT - Water softener & I | animal salt | F.H. KREIDER I 2400 Dairy Rd. I N Lancaster, PA 17601 | I 717-898-0129 I America’s sweet tooth is switching to corn tools You may need saws, knives, and wood chisels. Make cuts either at a good side branch or nearly flush with the mother branch. This avoids leaving “dead end” stubs. Make smooth, fast-draining wound surfaces Remove splintered, rough, or loose wood from all parts of any wound with a wood chisel or sharp knife. Trim off all bark not solidly attached to the wood Use a sharp knife, exposing uninjured bark on all edges of the wound. After the wood has thawed, lift, straighten, and support trees, shrubs, or evergreen trees with wire encased m a hose wherever it touches the bark. Supports should remain a full season Cover ex posed roots with soil and mulch with leaves or straw. Adams County Extension Office, 999 Lincoln Way West, Gettysburg. The meeting is sponsored by the extension office and the Adams County Beef Producers Association The public is invited wildest dream, doesn’t it 7 But it’s already happened It took place very quietly from 1970 and 1980 and, if it hadn’t, we’d already be paying some incredible prices at the supermarket, in the diner, at the vending machine, and in just about any place where we eat or drink. The energy source, of course, is sugar and sweeteners and a happy combmation of increased use ot corn for sweeteners and a sensible reduction m refined sugar use by Americans has brought this remarkable, and little known, economic miracle about. In 1970, the average American consumed 101 pounds of sugar sweeteners refined cane and beet sugar. Of that 101 pounds, 45.5 THE PATZ solution: pounds came from unported cane sugar In 1980, it is estimated that Americans consumed 87.2 pounds of refined sugar from sugar cane and sugar beets with 37.8 pounds commg from imported cane sugar. But there has been a big switch in total sweetener use utilizing non refmed sweeteners, com syrups - high fructose and glucose - and dextrose. In 1970, the average American - even if he or she didn’t know what it was - consumed seven-tenths of a pound of high fructose, 14 pounds of glucose and 4.6 pounds of dextrose, for a total of 19.3 pounds of corn derived sweeteners. In 1980, the average American consumed 18.9 pounds of high CALFhutches llberdome start them out right BEAT THE PRICE INCREASE! New Pnce Will Be $299 Present Price $279 SPECIAL WHILE THEY LAST-LIMITED OFFER ALL 3 FOR Hutch ‘245 1 ONLY Gal. Wire Pen ... *l9 r Feeding Unit *isj JLiw FOB Terre Hill TERRE HILL SILO CO. INC. TERRE HILL, PA 17581 PH: 215-445-6736 or Salesman James Esbenshade - 717-464-2090 fcAUNO^ ERECTION DISCOUNTS I| ON NEW SILOS! fructose, 18 4 pounds of glucose and 3 8 pounds of dextrose for a total of 41.4 pounds of corn derived sweeteners. So, we used 21.8 more pounds of corn products and 7.7 pounds less of unported sugar And, according to all indications, corn produce use as sweeteners, primarily high fructose, is ex pected to keep on increasing in the future. The major boost coming due to the fact that soda makers are switching to high fructose as fast as they can. The boom in the use ot corn products for sweeteners is such that m 1980 some 500,000 bushels of corn, or about eight percent of the total crop, was used tor this pur pose