■ ' y - WeSpeciollzeln A - COMPLETE OPERATION... Buildings end Equipment AOST§FJ * AGSTAR STANDS BEHIND THEIR BUILDINGS AND EQUIPMENT WITH A FULL YEAR.WARRANTY. Agstar Hog and Calf Equipment: A Modular 24-lt wide farrowing finishing I gestation buildings B Modular 32 ft wide farrowing nursery t gestation buildings C Lot or pasture fountains 0 Hog lot gates I partitions ' E Heavy duty hog t cattle waterers F Big capacity feeders G Ventilation equipment ★ FULL LINE PARTS DEPARTMENT ★ WE SELL, SERVICE & INSTALL EiMHEDD EQUIPMENT, INC. Iv r iriHm. RDI.Rt. 272S.,HermlleRd., Willow Street, PA Phone: 717-464-3321 Serving The Industry For Over 20 Years SWINE & CALF CASTLE SELF-CONTAINED OR PITLESS H Round feeders I Feed delivery system* J Gaivanued vertical pen partitions K Hag troughs L Rorcelainized Steel slats M Rotary feeders N force lalmied watering cups O Baby pig feeders f Farrowln* stalls (pens 0 F't heaters R Nipple waterers S Space-saver nursery feeders T Flex auger systems deed bins U Gestation stalls I buildings V Soft-Grip Flooring W Flat Deck Nursery X Concrete g Fiberglass Slats New theory ‘sheds light 9 on plant growth BELTSVILLE, Md. - Decades old ideas about how light regulates the growth and flowering of plants are being challenged by a theory developed at USDA’s Horticultural Science and Plant Physiology Institutes in Beltsville, Maryland. Plants react to a continuous gradient of light and radiant heat, contrary to long-standing assumptions that they respond to only discrete bands and peaks of red and blue visible light, ac cording to H. Marc Cathey, a world authority on growth regulation systems and culture of ornamental plants. At a May symposium on “Strategies of Plant Reproduc tion” held by USDA’s Science and Education Administration, Cathey explained that research he and colleagues Lowell E. Campbell and Richard W. Thimijan conducted shows,that solar and other optical radiation outside the visible region contribute to plant growth. While' visible light and ambient temperature measurements correlate reasonably well for plants grown under fluorescent lamps, such measurements are inadequate outdoors and wherever plants are exposed to therrrtal (heat) radiation in addition to visible light. These findings have important consequences for enhancing plant growth and reproduction. Cathey and other" Beltsville scientists have BOU-MATIC AUTOMATED MILKING SYSTEM Double Herringbones \h ,! ix i. ■'. II •* b M‘ .* ; . *ft, j| Polygon Herringbones With Our Trained Service Technicians And The Latest In Testing Equipment - WE CAN SERVE YOU BETTER LET US SHOW YOU WHAT BETTER MILKING MEANS... ★ Better Milking means healthier * Better Milking means a Vented udders stretch Bore Liner ★ Better Milking means a better let * Better Milking means alternating down pulsation for better massaging ★ Better Milking means a better ★ Better Milking means a Lower mitkout Vacuum ★ Better Milking means higher ★ Better Milking means more butterfat test gentle milking at teat end Better milking means more Profit which is yours. • PLANNING LAYOUTS • SALES • INSTALLATION • SERVICE SHENK'S FARM SERVICE 501 E. Woods Drive Lititz, Pa. 17543 Phone 717-626-1151 Our Service Trucks Are Radio Dispatched 24 HR. SERVICE OFFERED After 6 P.M. - Call: Ray Shenk - 717-626-1152 Vic Leninger - 717-653-1378 Mervin Nissley - 717-872-4565 Gary Walton - 215-593-6966 Rick Thompson - 717-627-1530 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 20,1981—€ already shown that the size, shape, color, pollution tolerance, and flowering of many plants can be influenced by manipulating chemicals, light, and temperature. The new theory could carry growth regulation research even further. Cathey, Campbell, and Thimijan have found, for example, that many economically important crops (com, soybeans, and others) can tolerate wide ranges of light and heat. Their growth and reproduction depends on the total amount of radiation they receive and not on the wavelengths of that radiation. Within reasonable limits, the wanner these plants, the better they produce The theory divides plants mto four groups depending on their thermal and spectral (light) requirements. Plants are either: spectral - and thermal-insensitive (for example, roses and snap dragons); spectral-insensitive and thermal-sensitive (tomatoes, geraniums); spectral-sensitive and thermal-insensitive (lettuce, strawberries); or spectral- and thermal-sensitive (chrysan themums, woody plants). Thermally sensitive plants will not tolerate high levels of non-- visible, infrared irradiance, said Cathey. Spectrally sensitive plants require wavelengths of relatively low levels of blue and red light, depending, instead, on a broad band of the visible light spectrum. THINKING OF A PARLOR, PIPELINE OR UPDATING YOUR PRESENT SYSTEM? BOU-MATIC HAS THE TECHNOLOGY YOU'RE LOOKING FOR r-WE HAVE GOOD USEDTANKS IN ALL SIZES • 625 Gal. • (2) 800 Gal • 1000 Gal. • 1500 Gal. • 300 Gal. • 400 Gal. • (3) 500 Gal. • 600 Gal. Trigon Herringbones DEC BOU-MATIC 113