UNIVERSITY PARK Looking for an entertainment bargain?" arm State’s 69th Annual Hor oJture Show will be underway free to the public on September 11 and 12. Held in “big top” circus tents in the flower gardens on University Drive, the show at tracts some 20,000 visitors each year. The event will feature exhibits from small fruits to flowers, illustrating how horticulture touches human lives. Visitors can tour the show from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Sept. 11 and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sept. 12. Bridget K. Behe, senior at State College, and Robert D. Rowley, Penn State ‘hort’ show entertainment bargain senior from Indiana, will co manage the many exhibits. The show is presented by the Penn ■State.Horticulture Club. A floriculture exhibit by Kim berly A. Uhde, senior from Ben salem, and Ronald L. Taddei, senior from Wyoming, will em phasize outdoor and indoor flower displays in a home setting. Out doors, an arrangement of different types and colors of annual flowers will create' a natural landscaped appearance surrounding the house. Indoors, a kitchen and living room display will illustrate several methods to enhance the beauty of a home with flowering or foliage plants. Uses for herbs will be displayed in the kitchen. Janice L. Baun, senior from Wexford, will direct the herb display. Annual flowers used in the outdoor landscaping will also be KATOLIGHT Solving Standby Power Problems... World Wide selecting a Standby Power System for any industrial application. Katolight Standby Power Systems have a proven record of dependable operation throughout the world. Katolight Corporation offers a variety of models to select from ranging in size from 2 KW to 1400 KW, gasoline, natural gas, liquefied petroleum gas or diesel fueled, SO, 60, or 400 HZ, 900 to 3600 RPM, with voltages from 12 VDC to 6600 VAC. Katolight Control Systems provide instant response or any desired TUT I HERSHEY EQUIPMENT I FI I COMPANY ' ,NCI SYCAMORE IND. PARK 255 PLANE TREE DRIVE Route 30 West At LANCASTER, PA. 17603 The Centerville Exit (717)393-5807 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 11,1982—817 displayed indoors in cut flower arrangements. Adjacent to the exhibit tent will be a sales tent managed by Bar bara A, Buss, senior from Em maus, and lisa A. Blomquist, failure. Many combinations of safety features, remote start, automatic trans fer, phase selection, and others are obtainable through the control system. Optional aquipmant . . . like special fuel systems, weather proof housings, remote radiators, audible warning systems, battery chargers end more can be included to perform the neces sary tasks of your specific application. When you need reliability in a Standby Power System, contact the Engine Generator Set people . . . contact Katolight Corporation. junior from Meadville. Foliage and flowering plants, and ornamental trees and shrubs, will be on sale. Improve soil tilth LEESPORT- “Have you ever wondered why your topsoil seems so hard and soaks up water so slowly?” asks Duane E. Physer, district conservationist of the U.S. Soil Conservation Service in Berks County. The reason soil is hard could be due to a lack of adequate organic matter in the topsoil, he explained. Organic matter helps prevent compaction of the topsoil and keeps the soil pores open, said Pysher, adding the amount of soil pores is important to the rate of infiltration of moisture into the soil thereby reducing runoff. “Organic matter makes the soil easier to work by improving the soil tilth through aeration of the soil,” he said. “Organic matter can be added to your soil in several ways. Leaving crop residue on the soil surface and incorporating it into the soil during tillage operations is one method. Another way is to plant a green manure crop for the purpose of tilling into the soil for (organic matter, ex plained. Pysher. Another way is to spread organic matter such as leaves, grass clippings, animal Eanure containing raw on the soil surface id till into the soil. Pysher noted ‘‘any of these methods will increase the organic matter of the soil and will improve its tilth and ability to absorb ram water.”