The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 16, 1961, FARM and HOME section, Image 18

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    PLOW
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WITI
SAME POVI
I
New, large-scale equipment
is making it easier to wait
until soil has the right mois
ture for good plowing. This
eight-bottom, semi-mount
ed plow is new this year. It
requires a near-90-horse
power tractor for power.
These large mounted plows
require somewhat different
methods of adjustment than
do pull-type plows. Be sure
to check tractor tire pres
sure when using a mounted
plow. Use the instruction
manual for adjustments.
A
i
I
I
HOW TO TURN
MORE REPLACEMENTS
INTO PROFITABLE
EGG PRODUCERS
Do this: coordinate proper feeding with
protective medication through every stage —
from baby chicks to laying hens.
You’ve selected your replacement
chicks for bred-in characteristics
that should bring you more eggs
over a longer period at less cost.
How can you be more certain
that these chicks will live up to their
potential and make your egg-produc
ing operation an economic success?
By following good management
and sanitation practices. By taking
every precaution to see that disease
is kept out of your flocks all the tvay
through ...from chick to laying hen.
Disease, visible or invisible, is
the biggest handicap to making more
egg money. The Cyanamid Feed
Health Program — described step
by-step here—shows you ivhat to do
to lick disease, tvhen to do it and how
to do it. It’s a proved program—
practical, sound, easy to follow.
Talk to your feed man. Ask him
for your free folder which describes,
in detail, the Cyanamid Feed-Health
Program for layers and breeders.
If he cannot supply you, write direct
to: American Cyanamid Company,
Agricultural Division, New York 20,
N.Y. s.4UREOMYC1N is American
Cyanamid Company’s trademark for
chlortet racy dine.
2. Feed potentiated starter feed
with Aureomycin. A pf starter con
taining 200 grams of aureomycin per
ton, fed for 3 to 4 weeks, protects
against CRD, synovitis, blue comb and
coccidiosis — guards against vaccina
tion reactions.
3. Dust away Newcastle disease and
bronchitis. Control Newcastle disease
and infectious bronchitis simultane
ously. Use Cyanamid Dust biolator®,
or aquavac® in the drinking water, at
1 to 7 days of age. Repeat at 3 to 4
weeks and 12 to 16 weeks of age.
5. Don’t risk disease setbacks later.
Use a potentiated treatment feed con
taining 200 grams of aureomycin per
ton at any time trouble shows up,
including coccidiosis outbreaks, aureo
mycin effectively controls CRD, syno
vitis, blue comb as well as coccidiosis.
i mwi
6. House more top-performing hens.
When you follow this program, you put
more healthy pullets in the laying
house. At the first sign of trouble—
drop in feed consumption or slump in
egg production—use a feed containing
AUREOMYCIN.
rnuuitAm
CYAN AMID SERVES THE MAN WHO MAKES A BUSINESS OF AGRICULTURE _
1. Give them health in the drinking
water. First immediate step for re
placement chicks is aureomycin®
Soluble in the drinking water for first
48 hours. This assures adequate early
intake of aureomycin to guard against
CRD, synovitis and blue comb.
4. Keep growing chicks healthy. At
4 weeks of age, change to grower feed
with 0.02% Nitrophenide. Feed up to
12 weeks to control coccidiosis. If an
outbreak occurs after 12 weeks, treat
with sulmet® drinking water solution.
The label instructions on Cyanamid
products, and on products containing
Cyanamid ingredients, are the result
of years of research and have been
accepted by Federal and/or State Gov
ernments. Always read the labels and
carefully follow directions for use.
COORDINATED
FEED-HEALTH
F or most corn growers an excellt
expensive machine operation they
have a great effect on the costs of
ing, will influence the stand of cor
the final yield. Often the deciding
sive minimum tillage method of j
plowing has been done.
The three over-all factors tha>
kind of plowing job you’ll do are:
plow; (2) adjustment of the plow
when you plow. Points one and tw
before you go to the field. Rainy <
good time to go over the general <
Check to make sure the plow
distance between the tip of each
Then measure from the edge of ea
You shouldn’t have more than 'A in
One method of correcting alig
holding the plow bottoms to the b<
a level concrete floor. Tighten all
a hammer while tightening. This w
into alignment. Unless the bottoms
of soil, and turning it with the s;
in the field won’t result in a good
Even though you are reasonal
condition you still may not be sa
been doing. One thing to conside
old plow behind one of the newe:
it too fast.
It takes a different type of m<
laying the soil over at a 50 degre<
than it does at three or three and
way to check this is to simply slow
to bring out a new plow for a tr
they can go a gear higher with a r
one they have been using.
One other point to consider w
slippage. For example on clay soil
normal. If your tractor wheels ar<
adding 10^ extra cost per dollar :
slippage? It will vary from 5% to
to clay soil, the higher one to sand
if you can actually see the tire slij.
to the rear wheels.
When a mounted plow won't opera
will have to adjust the top link as
be discussed in your implement mai
using a mounted plow is the spacin
don't, the front bottom will be cuttir
These mounted plows will have a
may need to be changed from time