Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, March 19, 1983, Image 41

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    (Continued from Page Al)
Arena Benefit Sale held jointly by
the Pennsylvania Holstein
Association and Penn State to
promote hinds for the new Ag
Arcnd
She was also a member of the
Penn State Dairy Judging Team in
1981 and placed sixth overall at the
Eastern States Exposition.
In addition to her knowledge of
the dairy industry, Ms. Cooper has
a BS degree from Slippery Rock
State College in Environmental
Science Land Planning. After
wort there
Ms. Cooper was employed by the
Environmental Education staff of
the Slippery Rock Area School
District. The four-member staff
set up a complete environmental
education program for students
CIRCLE STORAGE &
VPgp DRYING SYSTEMS
Circle Steel Bins are de
signed and built specific
ally for long-lived reliable
storage of grain with min
imum maintenance and ■
cost.
If that's what you need,
call us ...
CONTINUOUS FLOW DRYING
DOESN’T HAVE TO COST
A TANK AND A LEG!
Shivvers' sy>
tinuous flow di
the drying bin.
and automatic.
Drying capai
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Automatic, i
We Offer Complete Grain Handling
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DvnFD Supply 539^» d
|\ I 11 1 l\ U” I ■ 1 Chambersburg, PA 17201-0219,.-
111I 11 • CO. PH; 717-263-9111
/ '
Sylvia Cooper
animals in the herd,” she said,
including Winding Trail Happy
from kindergarten to twelfth ajflE-92 daughter of Har
opgjjg borcrest Happy Crusader with a
Ms." Cooper was chairman of I rd j >{ , 2 ?’ 2^ jr po ™ t}s 01
curriculum development and wai 921 fat - Ms C^per
instrumental in developing a book so . J 133 a two-year-old Pete
of lesson plans for teaching en- 4 au^?f er anc * a S&n
vironmental education. The book daughter out of Conducts,
was later distributed to all of the * 3111 7Vp P rou< *. of the un
school districts in Butler County. Pavement I’ve seen m our home
The staff was also responsible for ““j? P 3B * ten . years ‘
building five Environmental rollmg herd average k now 19,794
Learning Centers complete with P 0 of
self guiding nature trails, bridges our *}f salc ?‘
and outdoor amphitheaters. - 1 very glad to be here m
Ms. Cooper was also employed Lancaster she Said, and lam
as anJhtenLby thaßutler-Gounty -partoeutoly loofang-forward to
Conservation District y and was meeting farmers from this area,
involved in mapping prime Giant Involvement
agricultural land in Butler County.
Through all her years in the
classroom, she has maintained an
active interest in the home farm.
“I have bred and still own three
GRAIN DRYING SYSTEMS
TO CONSERVE THE WORLD S FUEL SUPPLY
About 4 million people are in
volved in U.S. farming. That’s
more than the combined total of
American steel, oil, electronic and
airlines industries.
LtHOrtf Farming, Saturday, March 19,1983—A41
Jim Lake of the National Conservation Tillage Information
Center in Ft Wayne. Indiana joined the second annual Tillage
Conference, Tuesday. The Tillage Center offers farmers a
telephone reference service, a monthly newsletter and
reference material. To contact them, calf (219) 422-3373.
Conservation conference
featured a panel of three farmers
and one Penn State agronomist,
each experienced in conservation
tillage. They are John Wiker, Jere
Swarr, Kenny Bleacher and H.
Grant Troop. Swarr has been in
volved in planting no-till for only
three years, but said he is satisfied
with the results. He uses one-third
no-till on his 225 acres of com.
Bleacher reported completing
his second year in the Lancaster
County 5-acre competition with an
average yield of 188.6 bushels per
acre.
Wiker, who plants 1000 acres of
com each year in three townships
in Lancaster County, said he has 17
years experience with no-till. “I
was a little slow in getting into no
till because everyone said you’ll
DONT LOSE
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digs, churns and blends crop
residue into a-umform ridged
surface that-fesists wind and
water erosion
/ That’s grounds for
seeing your Glencoe Dealer today.
“For the name of your nearest dealer, please contact”
, HAMILTON
\ EQUIPMENT, Inc.
f —* WliTn 567 South Reading Rd.
U j P-O. Box 478, Ephrata, Pa. 17522
VS=7 ' J Ph0ne:(717)733-7951
(Continued from Page A2B)
have to use more herbicides. But
I’ve never found that To be the
case,” he reflected.
Troop, a Penn State agronomist,
warned the audience that “You
can have a serious erosion problem
with just sheet erosion,” a loss
of soil as thin as a sheet. “Too
many farmers think that if they
don’t have deep gullies, then they
don’t have problems.’ ’
Troop finished his discussion by
offering the audience his own
definition of conservation:
“Getting the most out of the
ground within its own limits of
producing.”
The Tuesday program was
sponsored by the Lancaster County
Conservation District and the
county Extension service.
• Exclusive 5 year limited
warranty on both main frame
and shanks
u
FEMA