LOOK! Save Money On Uncomparable Quality! KNIGHT MANURE SPREADERS depend . one Knight Gratz Chain Double Web is Standard Equip. . Me ri A.LS& Take advantage of these reduced prices while they last! • Model 180 single axle, setup with Gratz Chain Web, ready to go with top beater, 4"x4" rub rails fastened on sides of spreader to protect the spreader and your loader in case you hit the sides • Model 252 single axle, with double Gratz Web, top beater, low spinner beater for liquid or fines ideal to top dress alfalfa, etc. Hydraulic endgate with dual lift cylinders and hoses to tractor, 4”x4” rub rails mounted on sides of spreader for loader protection in case you hit sides of spreader • Model 350 tandem axle, nite box is bolted onto undercarriage for extra strength in water gullies and rough terrain, Gratz Double Web, worm gear drive, hydraulic endgate for liquid and fines, 4”x4” protection rub rail mounted on sides of spreader, top beater • Model SSO'soup or solid tandem axle with dump to raise bed for liquid as stand ard equipment, lower spinner beater for liquid or fines to top dress alfalfa etc. Liquid hydraulic endgate, top beater, special sides on this spreader are curved in with a small lip so liquid does not splash out over sides. Ideal for liquid lagoons or solid stable manure, double Gratz Chain Web. This spreader has rubber seal flaps for liquid • Model 410 tandem axle with oscillating 8 bolt heavy duty axles, box is made of 10 gauge steel floors with heavy duty frame, undercarriage completely separate from bolt on box, double Gratz Chain Web, top beater, 4”x4" rub rails to protect sides of box and loader in case you hit sides with your loader hydraulic endgate with hoses to your tractor. Top beater for heaped loads • Model 410 soup or solid tandem axle with dump to raise bed for liquid as standard equipment, lower spinner beater for liquid or fines to top dress alfalfa etc. Hydraulic liquid endgate, top beater, special sides on this spreader are curved in with a small tip so liquid does not splash out over sides. Ideal for liquid lagoons or ■ solid stable manure, double Gratz Chain Wed, rubber seal flaps for liquid *O f 33o°° -UP Your spreader may be worth more than you thought. Stop by or call now. Amish - need transportation ? We can pick you up, justca ,l. MAKE EVERY BITE COUNT ... With A KNIGHT MINI-AUGGIE STATIONARY MIXER Electronic Scales, 82 Bushel Capacity, 3 H.P. Electric Motor With Drive is ' Standard Equipment. Here are some very important features you should consider before you buy any mixer; 1. Mixing area is made of 3/16" copper 5.3 mixing augers guarantee precise bearing steel to resist rusting from high mixed rations which will pay for this unit acid feeds. very quickly. Users can verify this factor 2. This unit is designed, to move through a 36" doorway. 3. This unit features direct driye which eliminates all belts, with* an industrial oil bath gear box. 4. Standard equipment includes magnet in unloading chute to remove foreign metal. NOW...Larger Transport Models Available A BINKLEY & HURST. BROS. 133 Rothsville Station Rd., Lititz, PA 17543 Ph: (717) 626-4705 Business Hours: Mon. ~Fri. 7 AM to 5 PM; Sat. 7 AM to 11:30 The Growing Number One! No Ratchets or Beits to Trouble Y *3,205°° *4,967°° *5,700“° •7,426“° •6,989°° i „ ■ Competitive Prices Paid Uncaster Farming, Saturday, October 24.1981-Dl5 Adams farmers elect directors CASHTOWN Six directors were elected and tifteen policy recommendation were approved at the recent annual meeting of the Adams County Farmers’ Association held here at the Cashtown Fire Hall> One policy approved by the Adams County farmers recom mends the use of DDT Jo rid the state of gypsy moth. Three policies were aimed at keeping animal rights groups from interfering with farming operations. The policy that was finally voted on and approved stated that the “Friends of Animals” actions should* be cur tailed so as not to hinder legitimate farming activities and that PFA should seek to improve relations with the animal rights movement and work with advocates in a professional educational manner to explain those practices necessary in modem agriculture. The fifteen recommendations approved at this annual meeting will come before the Pennsylvania Farmers Association Annual meeting which begins November 8 at the Hershey Convention Center. Concerning the Water Rights Bill, the farmers resolved that the right to use ground and surface water for agricultural purposes is a property right which should not be taken from the owner without just compensation. Farmers also recommended : that manure storage facilities be exempt from local taxation; that the percentage of associate members be increased from 10 percent to 20 percent for PFA; that FRANK A. FiLLIPPO, INC. - WANTED - DISABLED & CRIPPLED COWS ( BULLS & STEERS Slaughtered under overnment Inspection state and local government be required to restore roadside drains for farm access which are Eliminated or changed by road maintenance; that milk handlers, proprietary and cooperative, be required to develop a formula and pay producers on the basis of solids, not butterfat; that a combination of a locally levied flat rate mcome tax and property tax for the purpose of school finance be implemented and that the rate and proportion of taxes be at the discretion of the local taxing authority; that poultry and egg buyers come under and be in cluded in the packers and stockyard act requirmg payment to producers within a given amount of time; that daylight saving tune be left as it is; that Conrail be returned to a private rail system by 1984. Six directors were elected: Jeffrey Waybright, Ronald Flint, Arthur Musselman, • Samuel Stoner, Tedd Rhodes and Fred Scott. At an orgamzatonal meeting of the Board of Directors, Mervin Myers, Littlestown was reelected president; Fred Scott also of Littlestown was elected vice president; Calvin F. Bream, Gettysburg, treasurer; Mary Mills,' Gettysburg, secretary; and Mabel Bream, county information director. Delegates to the State Con vention are Mervin Myers, Fred Scott, Guy Donaldson and Dale King. Alternates are John R. Pitzer, John Hess and Arthur Musselman.