AMD It can eliminate 40% of all your engine maintenance problems. A Deutz Air Diesel is a true i engine There are no troubl components such as hoses, radiators associated with; engines A Deutz is coofed is engineered to save you' in fuel over other diesels Over one million Air Diesel from 5 to 500 HP are worki in all fields of application throughout the world , SEE OUR DISPLAY AT AG PROGRESS DAYS AUG. 25 - 26 - 27 II Stauffer Diesel Inc. PHONE 717-354-4181 NEW HOLLAND, PA 17557 FARM FOR LEASE . Cow Pasture River Farm -110 acres crop. 450 acres pasture. 20x60, 20x70 silos, new unloaders, automated feed alley, extensive barns and improvements. 60x90 steel-span shop, gram storage. Houses, stored and standing crops and good experienced help also available. Sealed bids in by noon Fnday, September 4. $20,000 minimum bid per annum, 3 years minimum term. For more information contact owner/operator. DISPERSAL SALE 120 HEAD CATTLE 850 EWES, FARM EQUIPMENT SAT., SEPTEMBER 5 10 A.M. River Bend Farm (1 hour West of Staunton, VA.) From Staunton 254 West into 42 South. Go through Goshen on 39 West to Millboro Springs. 1 mile West on 39, Turn right onto 678 (by Windy Cove Church). Proceed 10 miles. Just after crossing Cow Pasture River turn left on 625. 2 miles to farm. Watch for auction signs. AS I AM LEASING MY FARM. I WILL SELL -120 Head Cattle 43 Brood Cows (mostly young Angus, some Charolais and BWF) with calves by side. Bred back by 2 Simmental/Hereford Hybnd Bulls. 6 X-bred first-calf heifers with calves. 19 open breeding-age (750 lbs.) replacement heifer. Selling in small uniform groups. Will be tested for TB and Bangs. Larger calves will be weaned on sale day. Cattle sale last. 850 Ewes An outstanding flock of young growthy sheep - Suffolk, Columbia and crosses - will be sold in small lots (25 or less) by ?ge and type. Majority native-raised, ear-tagged and production records kept. 125% weaning rate 110 open breeding-age replacement ewe lambs 80/81. 75 yearlings lambed as ewe lambs 79/80.250 2 yr. olds 78/79. 250 3 yr. old 77/78. Balance solid mouth ewes. Many exposed for Nov.-Jan. lambs. Mostly Luxford and KJ rams. 6 Suffolk, 5 Columbia, 2 Dorset, 1 Rambouillet/Cohlmbia, 2 Fmn/Suffolk yearlings, 1 Fmn/Rambouillet ram lamb. Also selling small group of Columbia/Suffolk cross black wool ewe lambs, 1 black ram lamb, and 1 black wether. Sheep sale first. Farm Equipment Tractor - Oliver 1855 row-crop Diesel with full cab (100 HP) 1200 hrs. J.D. 2030 Diesel with winter enclosure and full options with 146 90% of all multi-cylinder air-cooled diesels in service today are Deutz WSJtL i*m/ loader (65 HP) 1500 hrs. J.D. 820 Diesel (35 HP) 1900 hrs. Good rubber on all. Silage - N.H. 782 two-row adjustable-head corn chopper, Kools KB 57 Blower, Dion Silage Wagon (previous forage equipment only used for 2 seasons) Dion Wagon with top. J.D. 115 Chuck Wagon, Grove Wagon. Hay - Gehl 1500 round baler. J.D 14T square baler. J.D. 640 rake. J.D.J.207 mower conditioner (7’). N. 1.279 Cutdiboner (9’). N.H. 3 pt. bale mover with push-off. Cultivation - 7 shank Taylor Wade chisel plow. J.D. 16”, 3 bottom plow. Combination: Lely Rottera, 4-row A.C. corn planter, 200 gal. front-mounted tank, hydraulic pump and spray boom for one tnp secondary tillage, complete herbicide in corporation and com seeding. Irrigation Hemzman, Traveler Model 3335 w/660’ Angus hose, 1200’ of 5” x 30’ aluminum pipe. Hale PTO pump. Misc. - Farmhand 880 Tub Grinder w/small gram attachment. Little Auggie w/scales, ‘77 Chevy 1 ton dual wheels, 4WD, removable pipe racks. 15 KDW Wmco PTO Generator. N.H. 327 Spreader (130 bu.). Ford 9’ scraper blade, International 76 pull-type combme (7'). Honey Wagon. A.C. all crop gram drill (7’). MF model 27 subsoiler with un derground cable laymg attachment. 50’ PTO transport gram auger, 48 % ton Chevy flat bed. 60” Howard Rotavator with new set of blades. Hand-powered buckwheat cleaner. Equipment is m good shape and field ready. Sheep Feeding - 21, 8’ indoor self-feeders. 40 2’ x 8’ portable hay/gram/silage feeders made of pressure treated lumber. 6 all-steel no-waste round bale feeder (sides slide m). 4 all-steel adjustable creep gates. 8 Smedley Hog feeders. 10 outdoor salt feeders. Bulk tank. Cattle Feeding - 6 round bale feeders, 3 calf-creep feeders, 4 lick tanks. Sheep Handling - Poldenvale portable corral and chute with gates, fanny stops, 3-way cutting gate and 2 fiberglass foot baths. Hess sheep crush flip crate. Archfield scale. Shaft driven electric shearing machine. Lambing pens and Fortex buckets. Maple Syrup - Small Bros. 12’x2V wood fired evaporator. 8’ backpah with raised flues and 4’ Rat syrupmg off pan. 2 floats, sap inlet regulator, steel arch, fire bricks 8x4x1% and 8 x 2% x 2 sap storage tanks. No small items. TERMS ARE CASH ON DAY OF SALE. Lunch will be served by Bath-Highland Vol. Fire Dept. Sale will be held rain or shine, under roof if necessary. Not responsible for accidents. Owner/Operator TERRY K. COLLIER 703/925-2209 Larry E. Garber - Auctioneer 703/434-9779 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 22,1981—A39 Ayrshire (Continued from Page AIS) winner was Matthew Edwards. In the woman’s there was a tie bet ween Sue Kulp and Elsie Wolff. And in the men’s division, the winner was Earl Keefer. With the exception of Ardrossen Farms, Villanova, the Conebella Farm is probably the oldest Ayrshire dairy farm in the state. Started in the 30’s by Charles Gable’s father, C. Harold Gable, the operation has grown to its present size. The farm has 198 acres planted mainly in com and alfalfa. Conebella Farms has received 23 consecutive breeder awards and has developed 36 cows with over 100,000 pounds of milk, and six of these exceeded 150,000 pounds. The current DHIA rolling herd average on 61 cows is 13,995 pounds of milk and 596 pounds of fat, with a 4.3 percent test. On July 27, 1981, nine animals in the herd scored 90 points or better with an official average of 81 points. Conebella Ora Renee scored 94 points. The free stall heifer bam was built m 1972 and the mam bam remodeled in 1980. The mam bam is a stall bam equipped with pipeline milkers. The managers are flush with the feed alley and finished with glazed tile. The managers m the heifer bam are also lined with glazed tile. The 8-feet-wide service alleys are mam tamed with-a bam cleaner. Ventilation provided by four fans was more than adequate and even though all the doors were open a fly was hard to fmd. President Keefer made his remarks after lunch after a fme rendition of popular and gospel songs by The Goodwill Barbershop Quartet, a local group. Keefer said the dairy business was headed for a period of challenge and uncertainty. The population will mcrease by 1% over the next five years but there will be a greater percentage of semor citizens—low consumers of milk—and a smaller percentage of people under 19 years of age. Therefore the trend will be toward USDA quarantines to contain Fla. medfly outbreak WASHINGTON, D.C. - The U.S. Department of Agriculture has established emergency regulations to restrict movement of 81 kinds of produce and plants from the Tampa, Florida, area to prevent the spread of Mediterranean fruit flies. According to Assistant Secretary of Agriculture C.W. McMillan, the regulated produce and plants can serve as Medfly hosts. The quarantined area includes a 48-square-mile area in Hillsborough County, centered in the Ybor City section of Tampa. The area is bounded on the north by Hillsborough Ave. (U.S. Rt. 92), on the east by Williams Road, on the south by a line Ms mile north of state route 676 A and on the west by Nebraska Ave. McMillan said a public hearing to receive comment on the action will be held September 15, at 10 a.m. in the Ybor Room, Curtis Hixon Convention Hall, 600 Ashley Drive, in Tampa. “This quarantine action, coupled with a parallel action by the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, is designed to contain the Florida breeders less not more milk consumption per capita. In 1974 milk was the number one beverage in this country. Today it ranks fourth behind soft drinks, coffee, and beer. The dairy in dustry invested 21 million dollars in advertising this past year while soft drinks invested 181 million and beer 225 million dollars. While milk demand is falling he said, milk production is increasing 2% times faster than cow numbers are decreasing. “We, today, are not producing for the market place, but for the government”. The alternatives for the dairyman he stated is to cull cows, take a close look at the bottom 5 to 7 percent of your herd, step up advertising by from 50 to 100 percent, reduce your debt load to lessen the pressure for poorer quality and higher production. For the Ayrshire cow to compete successfully m die future it must become larger with good feet and legs, and have an improved ability to convert more milk from larger amounts of roughage and less gram. Smaller cows which are profitable now will not be able to compete m the future. The export of feed grains and the production of alcohol from com will make cheap feed a thing of the past. Doug Dodds, Executive Secretary for the association told the group that, while he didn’t have a crystal ball, he felt that cows close to production age would bring a good pnce in the fall, there would be a soft market for heifers with some time to go. He also mentioned that the forced sale of an Ayrshire herd m Wisconsin averaged $2530 per cow. Milton Brubaker gave out 41 production awards for the association. 30 were the individual cows and 11 were herd awards. Mielke Heinz for Ardrossan Farms collected 21 certificates. One of the awards was for top herd in the state which produced an average of 16,784 pounds of milk with 687 pounds of butterfat and a 4 percent test, for the 119-cow operation at the Villanova farm. outbreak while we work with the state to eliminate it,” said Greg Rohwer of USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service. “Previous outbreaks of the pest in Florida in 1929, 1956,1962 and 1963 were all elimiated.” Regulated items include tomatoes, peppers, apples, apricots, avocados, some kinds of oranges and lemons, cherries, grapes, grapefruit, mangoes, peaches, pears, and many other kinds of fruits, vegetables, nuts and ornamentals. “These regulations were mad necessary by the trapping of Hire- Medflies in a trip m Ybor City ant another approximately 1% mile. away,” said Rohwer. ' Today’s action became effective as soon as it was signed by agencr officials because of the emergenev nature of the infestation. The public is invited to testify a t the hearing or send written comments, until October 13, tc Regulatory Support Staff, PPC, APHIS, USDA, Federal Building, Hyattsville, Md., 20782. Details of the action appear » 4 the August 14 Federal Reg&er.