AT ABS OUR LAST NAME IS ’ SERVICE BBS Your ABS Representative is SERVICE oriented, not only does he bring you professional technician service, your ABS representative provides you with, Top Quality Genetics through ABS’s progeny tested lineup. He also provides sound advice on your breeding program, in cluding advice on how to make the genetic mating service work to fit your needs. He provides complete service for people who breed their own cows, including liquid nitrogen service, and a full line of direct herd supplies. He comes to your farm when you call, through the extremes of cold, rain, sleet, snow, and heat. He tries hard to give service when you want it. Because you see he not only sells semen, and breeds cows, He Gives SERVICE TOO! When you think of your ABS representative THINK OF SERVICE. Call him today. Stop In At The 1984 AG PROGRESS DAYS And Visit With Us At Our Booth. We Will Be There To Help You With Designing A Complete Breeding Program To Get Your Herd Where You Want It To Be. Allenwood, PA Bangor, PA Carlisle, PA Clifford, PA Coburn, PA Columbia, PA Oornsife, PA Ephrata, PA Holtwood, PA Lebanon, PA Leola, PA Linden, PA Mansfield, PA Mifflinburg, PA Mifflintown. PA Millville, PA Prospectville, PA Reading, PA Reedsville, PA Rothsville, PA Stewartstown, PA Thomasville, PA Ulysses, PA West Grove, PA IN NEW YORK Johnson, NY Pen Yan, NY IN DELAWARE Kirkwood, PA IN NEW JERSEY Baptistown, NJ Elmer, NJ Lambertville, NJ Port Murray, NJ IN MARYLAND Detour, MD Mt. Airy, MD LVANIA George Showers Eric Heinsohn Wayne Piper William Horton Wendel Musser James Charles Steve Kieffer Darvin Yoder Paul Herr Paul Martin Lynn Gardner Larry Bower Harold Robson, Jr. John M. Beachy Mervin Zendt Wilmer Hendricks William Tyner Andrew Cooper Chester G. Selfridge Keith Campbell Tom Engle Ira Boyer Bonnie Barker Brian Geesaman Peter Vander Schaaf Calvin Crosby Dan Rush Cindy Gordeuk Cyndy Hetzell Robert Fulper Robert Kayhart Jim Carmack Allan Pickett RK ABS delivers more than just top quality genetics one better^. AMERICAN BREEDERS SERVICE 717-538-1812 215-588-4704 717-532-4401 717-222-3224 814-349-5310 717-898-8694 717-758-1714 717-733-0966 717-284-4592 717-949-2381 717-656-6700 717-323-9710 717-662-7731 717-966-1344 717-436-6386 717-458-5949 215-542-8479 215-378-1212 717-667-3181 717-733-1226 717-993-6836 717-225-3758 814-848-7674 215-869-9187 914-355-1692 315-526-6144 717-529-6548 201-996-2088 609-455-8187 717-658-7316 201-689-2605 301-775-7221 301-663-4191 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 18,1984—E27 1983 Ag Progress Photo highlight /v Sandy Frey, 10, of Chambersburg, demonstrates how milking used to be done at one of the exhibits at the Pasto Museum, one of the favorite places to visit at Ag Progress. Conservation stressed at Ag Progress Days HARRISBURG Several new activities will highlight this year’s conservation program at Penn State’s Ag Progress Days, reports Frederick Bubb, conservation education chairman. Computers in the conservation tent will demonstrate the latest ways for farmers to determine soil loss and evaluate effectiveness of conservation practices. Conservation tillage demon strations will be added to the conservation area tours. They will include plots comparing chisel plowing, no-till, and conventional plowing. Pasture no-till planting demonstrations will be held daily. A no-till planting on cropland terraces demonstration will be another addition. A new feature of the woodland management demonstration will be the inclusion of the value of woodland and farm fields in wildlife management. Personnel of the Pennsylvania Game Com mission will join foresters from the State Bureau of Forestry and Penn State in conducting the woodland and wildlife demonstrations. 1/v ORDER NOW FOR PROMPT DELIVERY Blue Ball (717)354-4125 Gap (717)442-4148 Conservation Chairman Bubb reports that conservation plants will again be the main theme in the conservation tent. About 40 dif ferent grasses, legumes, shrubs, forbs, and trees will be exhibited. Some will be displayed in both mature and immature growth. A special plant display will be prepared by Dr. Guy McKee, Penn State Professor of Agronomy, in cooperation with the USDA Soil Conservation Service’s Plant Materials Center in Big Flats, New York. Bus tours will be conducted over the conservation demonstration and research area where a wide variety of soil and water saving practices are in use. Tours leave every 20 minutes from the con servation tent at the west end of West 11th Street from 11:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Ag Progress Days show Penn State’s support of the State’s $3 billion agricultural industry. Hours are 9.00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, August 21, 22, and 23, 1984. Parking and admission are free. The satisfaction that comes from doing a good job of farming Liming is one of the most important factors m keeping your soil in the highest productive range By raising the pH from a level below 6 0 to 6 5 or higher you can expect to harvest as much as 5 more bushels of corn per acre with similar increases for all other forage and cash crops Martin LIMESTONE V * ‘/Ilf*** . . *