C2—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 12,1981 £*'f£- ' f at Bordentown,N.J. by Agway Inc. %T ’./s'* The '5850,000. facility, located ; C*vV?% ■* ?*”*?'*.*'"■ * adjacent to Agway’s Bordentown lit ▼» W - feed plant on Route 130, includes ‘ the latest seed conditioning and handling equipment and a 10,000 square foot warehouse. The con ditioning equipment, installed by . Ag Machinery Safety, Inc. of Layfayette, Indiana, is designed I for cleaning and conditioning 100.000 bushels of certified soybeans and approximately 100.000 bushels of wheat and barley seed annually. The new facility, built by Agway Buildings Department, will enable* Agway’s seed division to expand its soybean and cereal grain certified seed program to farmers m New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, and parts of southeastern Pennsylvania. The facility will serve approximately 50 Agway stores and represen tatives with complete seed needs, including distribution of turf grasses, alfalfa, clover, and forage seeds and hybrid seed corn. The certified seed will be produced under contract by far mers in New Jersey, Delaware, dnd Maryland. Its central location provides an adequate supply of high quality, locally adapted seed varieties. Nine full-tune and part-time employees will operate the facility. Seed valued at approximately $1.3 million will be conditioned at Bordentown. Research plots to evaluate new soybean varieties suited to the area are under development by " Agway on cooperating farms. Soybeans, traditionally grown in l. Angstadt gets DALLAS, TX - William E. Angstadt Jl, Vice President ot Reading Bone Fertilizer Company, has been elected to the Board ot Directors of the National Fertilizer Solutions Association (NFSAJ during its 27th Annual Convention neld in Dallas. Angstadt, a resident ot Shillmgton, was elevated to the Board because ot his involvement with the fluid fertilizer industry and dedication to the objectives and policies ot the NFSA. The National Fertilizer Solutions Association is an organziation composed ot members dedicated to the advancement ot the use ot fluid fertilizer. The NFSA represents over 1,7U0 companies in the United States and lb other countries. Fluid fertilizers now account tor approximately 2b percent ot the total fertilizer market. Angstadt will serve a three-year Cleaning up confusion over chemicals DOVER, Del. - Farm publications are full of ad vertisements for weed control materials that sound like the an swer to every farmer’s prayers. But when it comes to making selections, farmers need more to go on than the ads, says Delaware extension crops specialist Frank Webb. They need solid in formation. Weed control is an area of crop production that is advancing rapidly, says Webb. Scientists are constantly developing new chemicals and new methods of application. There are now chemicals that can be applied before the crop is planted; others that can be applied after planting but before the crop is up; and some that can be applied right over the growing plants, killing the weeds but sparing the crops. There are weed control chemicals for com, for soybeans, and for all the other agronomic crops. With' such a variety pf products on the market, it’s no wonder farmers are confused about which one to buy for which purpose, Webb said. And the confusion is increasing now as the ads start appearing for the new products for 1982, he added. Some of the new products represent real breakthroughs in weed control, says Webb. Others are jus| old, familiar chemicals under new trade names, or pre mized combinations of two well known products. It pays to know which are which. control products before buying, advises Frank Webb, Delaware Extension crops specialist. fertilizer post W.E. Angstadt II term and represent the NFSA as a Director at Large. Prior to his elevation to the Board, he worked on the Association’s 1981 Round-Up Committee and the Convention Committee in lit Bo. The one really new product is called Poast. Manufactured by BASF Company, this product can be used over top of soybeans for excellent control of grasses. Over top spraying is a relatively new practice made possible. by recent advances in chemicstry, notes Webb. Another new name in the marketplace l hs Bronco, manufactured by Monsanto Company. This is actually a mixture of two existing materials, Roundup plus Lasso. This com bination will be cleared for use on com and soybeans in no-tillage production. While such a product has a place in no-till production, says Webb, it’s important that growers realize what they are buying. Monsanto is also marketing a pre-mixed combination of Lasso plusatrazine. Last year, Ciba-Geigy released a similar product under the trade name Bicep. Actually a com bination of atrazme and Dual, this material is already widely ac cepted by growers. Another new name in the marketplace is Gramoxone. This is neither a new product nor even a combination of products, but simply ICI America’s new trade name for paraquat. When you’re planning your weed control strategy, it’s important to know whether a new product is really new, something familiar, or a combination ' of familiar Adams Co-op hikes power rates GETTYSBURG - Adams _ Electric Cooperative rates will increase on Dec. 15. The an- nouncement was made by Board President V. Kyle Trout, who said that 2.8 mills (|.0028> will be added to the charges for each kilowatt hour. For a member using 1,000 KWHs , per month, the net effect is a $2.80, or 4.8 percent, increase in monthly . charges. The percentage is higher for users of more than 1,000 and smaller for those who use less. This rate' change will permit the cooperative to achieve a 30 percent owner equity by the end of 1982. ‘‘We set the 30 percent goal in 1976,” Trout reported. "At that time, Adams Electric’s equity was 14.5 percent and we were strongly urged to improve it.” The pressure came from Washington, the source of the co-op’s loan funds. "We wanted to reach the goal by the end of 1983,” Trout continued. "We are now at 26.5 percent and, with this rate increase, will be at 30 percent within a year. There are sound reasons for such a move.” products. If it’s a pre-mix com bination, it’s also important to know the proportions of the chemicals in the mix. Only with this information can you use the ■product effectively. When you hear of a chemical that you are unsure about, call your county extension office. The ' county agent can tell you what the chemical is, how to use it, and -’whether dr not it’is more effective than the product you have been using. Carnation honors Weir HUGHSON, CA. - Joel K. Weir has been recognized by Carnation Genetics lor outstanding service in his’ capacity as District Sale Manager. He has been named "District Sales Manager U 1 the Month.” A Penn State graduate in animal industry, Weir supervises direct ' herd sales and distributors in Agway opens Phil Aiampi, New Jersey’s secretary of agriculture, and Fred Hough, Agway director from Augusta, N.J., inspect soybean certified seed conditioned at Agway's new seed conditioning facility at Bordentown, N. J. ‘ the Midwest, have become an important crop in the eastern United States. With new varieties, the crop will become increasingly important in New Jersey, eastern Pennsylvania, and the Delmarva Adams Electric’s board and management have been monitoring the wholesale price of power. They have been told to expect substantial, new.increases in each of the next two years. By reaching its equity goal sooner, the co-op pvpwts tn oneh!on the effects ST. LOUIS, MO. - L.D. Muller and Thomas Sweeney, of Penn State, were among university instructors, researchers and ex tension specialist who recently exchanged • thoughts on dairy research and the dairy industry at a special two-day meeting. “The conference was an ideal method of broadening the give and-take between the university community «nd industry research Used equipment prices up MINNETONKA, MN. - Prices of used tractors and farm equip ment are holding steady or rising despite weak crop and livestock markets and slack sales of new machines. At least that’s the indication from Marshall’s Farm Equipment Guide, a twice-yearly publication that reports on used equipment prices and related data. The January 1982 issue of the Guide has just been published. ,' • It shows that prices of popular, late-model tractors and combines are uniformly- as high or- higher than six months and a year ago. For the last half of 1981, prices Southeast Pennsylvania dJUI Eastern Maryland. He tirst joined Carnation Company in 1976 as a district sales manager in the Milling Division.- His appointment m the same capacity with the Genetics Division was made in 1979. Weir makes his home in Mount Joy. Purina holds dairy meeting Iflnt peninsula. , . ■ Many agricultural leaders and fanners were on hand for the December l open house, which included exhibits, displays, and educational activities. of anticipated power costs. Adams Electric serves 16,700 members, ot ( which-6,200 are in Adams County, 3,350 are in Cumberland County, 1,350 are in Franklin County, and 5,800 are in York County. efforts,” noted Daryle Greene, director of Research' and Development, Ralston Purina Company, sponsors of the meetmg. The conference Included group discussidns and - presentations intended to assist all ot the researchers in gaming a working knowledge of the various direc tions being taken in the field ot dairy cow nutrition, Greene added. were as much as 11% higher for some machines than in the first half, and as much as 14% higher than a year earlier. The increase appears to be general, across most makes and models of units less than 10 years old. However, many machines built before 1970 are steadily dropping in market value. It’s a reflection' ot supply demand conditions in the used market, according to Guide publisher Morris Dorosh. The "supply of late-model,f popular make tractors' and combines is down largely because tewer have been coming into dealers’ lots as trade-ins on new sales. At the same time demand tor such models continues strong trom farmers who might buy- brand-new equipment in more normal times. By contrast, rebates ami financing incentives trom manufacturers have probably reduced actual, net prices ot new machinery in many cases.