Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, January 05, 1985, Image 29

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    NE • KLINZING • BERG
• CORNELL • JAMESWAY • ACORN • FARMWAY
• BETTER-BILT • FARM-O-MATIC • BADGER
• PATZ • HEDLUND • CLAY • BARN-O-MATIC
HOOK AND EYE Prices FORAGE LINKS
A Chain You Must See To Appreciate
Only Then Will You See
What It Has To Offer
See Your Route Salesman
or Call Us At 626-1151
This Chain Will Replace Most Brands of Chains
MODEL K3X LIQUID PUMP U I . 1000 RPM 150 HP
(3600 GPM)
See the Legeoa On Dispby At The PA Fern Shew
LIQUID TANK SPREADERS
6 sizes to choose from 1200 gal
to 5000 gal.
ALL EQUIPMENT IN STOCK READY FOR DELIVERY
HUSKY FRONT MOUNT
SOIL INJECTORS
~I—J 2 ~\| V 7 Lilitz, P». 17543
p j I I CZI \ r'-O 501 E. Woods Drive
' L-JL_ZJI_J vJLJ VA —y Service on all Brands
FARM SERVICE .
_ _ . After 6 P.M. Call
Mervin Nissley Ray Shank
(717)020-1 151 717-872-4565 717-626-1152
HEAVY DUTY
REPLACEMENT CHAIN
New executive director
named for Franklin Co.
E. Gene Stoner, chairman of the
Franklin County Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation
(ASC) Committee, has announced
the appointment of Thomas A.
Kerr as county executive director,
effective Jan. 7.
Kerr recently completed the
ASCS County Operations Trainee
Program in preparation for his
new assignment.
Kerr is a graduate of Ohio State
University with a bachelor of
science degree in agriculture. He
held variolic aonoiiltiiral-
PRE-WINTER FACTORY
CLEARANCE!
TAKE IMMEDIATE OR SPRING
DELIVERY!
SAVINGS FROM
$1650t053350
ACT NOW! LIMITED OFFER!
• No beams, no posts -
100% useable space, no birds
• Easy erection -No high labor cost
• 100% maintenance free -
No painting or leaks
• Straighter sides for large equipment
'so? *
•* ATLANTIC
QUALITY
CALL TOLL FREE
1-800-942-1234
in New York State
1-800-431-1338
in Pennsylvania & Ohio
and other States
NK AHEAD...
’ures Markets on Page 3.
THII
l«d Futi
■mUMWO SYSTEMS
Lancaster Farming, Saturday, January S, 1985-A29
related positions primarily
associated with the fruit industry
in New York state and Penn
sylvania.
Kerr will direct the Franklin
County ASCS Office activities at
550 Cleveland Ave., Cham
bersburg. He will also coordinate
the Federal Conservation,
Production Adjustment and Price
Support Programs, serving the
farmers of Franklin County.
Kerr and his family are
currently residing near Cashtown
in Adams County.
Fungus to enter
INTEGRITY
moth war
WASHINGTON, D.C.
- A fungus that
destroys gypsy moths in
Japan may be field
tested against the pests’
tree-damaging Ameri
can cousins next spring,
a U.S. Department of
Agriculture scientist
reports.
“The fungus is a
potent parasitic killer of
gypsy moths in its
Honshu Island
homeland,” said
Richard S. Soper Jr., an
insect pathologist for
USDA’s Agricultural
Research Service and
leader of the fungus
research team.
The fungus - En
tomophaga aulicae - is
known to attack only
gypsy moth larvae,
Soper said. But before
USDA uses it to fight
these destructive pests,
he said, thorough
laboratory and field
experiments must be
conducted to ensure it
will not harm beneficial
insects.
“Early 20th century
Japanese scientists first
reported on the fungus
and how it controls
gypsy moths, but it was
impossible to isolate
living specimens and
maintain them,” he
said. “For example, a
New England en
tomologist collected
specimens in 1908, but
was unable to propagate
them.”
Soper said today’s
biochemical technology
enables scientists to
keep strains of the
fungus alive while they
are shipped to this
country for research.
In Japan last spring,
Soper searched for dead
gypsy moths and
isolated from them four
living strains of the
fungus. The strains are
now thriving in his
laboratory at the Boyce
Thompson Institute at
Cornell University,
Ithaca, N.Y.
Soper injected spores
from his collected
specimens into native
gypsy moths and got a
kill rate of over 90
percent under
laboratory conditions. A
USDA rearing facility
on Otis, Mass., supplied