Actual Prototype Shown ED Ship after show □ Pick up at show SHIP TO: (No P.O. Box Numbers Please) SEND ORDERS TO: Pa. State Plowing Contest Committee, 548 Miller Road, Millersburg, PA 17061, Phone 717-692-2443 Hit Them Your Best Ahh ... the ease of it all! When using Roundup don’t forget ease of handling. The only personal protective equipment (PPE) requirements are: • Shoes plus socks • Long-sleeve shirt • Long pants • Protective eyewear Remember to always read the label and follow PPE and other requirements. ROUNDUP -» For Total Weed Control, Roots and All. Plus get an easy to handle product. Roundup it a registerad trademark of Monsanto*. Zip. ✓ CASE DC 4 SHOW TRACTOR J.l. Case Collectors' Association Summer 1995 Convention 1995 U.S.A. National Plowing Contest August 23 - 27, 1995, near York, PA •1/16 Scale made by Spec Cast, Dyersville, IA • Licensed by J.l. Case Company • Die-cast metal - Collectors insert • Rubber tires - metal rims • Exhaust stack • Limited production - Determined by amount ordered by June 1, 1995 • Very limited quantity for sale at show - ORDER NOW. ORDER DEADLINE JUNE 1, 1995 SHIPPING OUTSIDE U.S.A. MUST PAY ACTUAL COSTS. Kills the whole weed roots and all Less risk of costly re-growth problem Less competition for your crop Higher profits come harvest time QUANTITY PRICE/TRACTOR ♦60.00 SHIPPING. 15 00 per tractor in U.S.A. TOTAL DUE IN U.S. FUNDS With Shot! Lancaster Faming, Saturday, May 13,1995-A29 Family Farm Business TOTAL djUNEB DAIRY MONTH 3 NEED YOUR ■ FARM BUILDINGS PAINTED? Let us give you a price! Write: Daniel’s Painting 637-A Georgetown Rd. Ronks, PA 17572 (or leave message) (717) 687-8262 tmm Spray on and Brush a in Painting E isi rsi B&B SPRAY PAINTING SANDBLASTING SPRAY - ROLL - BRUSH Specializing In Buildings, , Feed Mills - Roofs - Tanks - Etc., Aerial Ladder Equip. Stone - Barn - Restoration 574 Gibbon’s Rd, Blrd-ln-Hand, Pa. An*wiring Serriot (717) 354*55^1 (Continued from Pago A2t) The debate and the policy making process continues. In the meantime, Masser rotates his fields with three yean of small grains and one year of potatoes. It is part of the soil conservation plan that he has for all his acreage, and it requires him to farm much of his acreage in small grains in order to rotate potatoes well, even though grain production accounts for only about 5 percent of the company’s income. Along with conservation tillage, terracing and trying to maintain healthy farming prac tices, Masser also knows that the land that his enterprise keeps open will allow recharge of groundwater the constant source of water for all freshwater streams and rivers. Without healthy crop agriculture, and with out well-practiced livestock production that contributes to keeping local land open for crop production, Masser and others question how long it would take get-rich quick investors to pave over, bulldoze, or otherwise drain those recharge areas. In fact, Masser and others within the agricul tural community have offered that perhaps agriculture, and others who maintain open groundwater recharge areas, should be given some kind of credit by the rest of the communi ty for the amount of groundwater recharge their operations provide. “I believe in that,” Masser said. “It’s only fair, and it’s the only way to maintain those open areas that everyone benefits from.” Some early estimates on groundwater recharge for the area has suggested that farm land receiving 36 to 42 inches of rainfall per acre/per year recharges about a foot/per acre of water into the aquifer. “The more land we operate and own, the more water we ought to be allowed to use, because the more land kept open, the more water is available to recharge. “It’s consistent with farmland preservation (goals). We need to want to preserve farmland to continue to get water.”