The Mail-Journal, Volume 15, Number 6, Milford, Kosciusko County, 1 March 1978 — Page 11
Four county dairy tour March 2 The Four County Dairy tour will start at 10 a.m. Thursday, March 2 in Elkhart County. The first stop will be at the Truman Martin farm located one mile east of Nappanee. Martin milks 75 cows in a double six herringbone. He has a heated calf pen and a farm feed mixing center. The second stop is at the farm of Oliver and Joe Hibschman located five miles east of intersection U.S. 6 and S.R. 15. The Hibschmans milk 50 cows, have a father-son partnership and use comfort stalls and a welded in place piepline. The women of Hex Grange will provide the noon luncheon. Reservations can be made at the
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Kosciusko County Extension office. Don Hill, Purdue dairy specialist and Ed Carson, Purdue Ag economist will be the discussion leaders. Hearing rescheduled The hearing for unsafe building owners in Milford to appear in Marion Circuit Court and show cause why they should not be considered in contempt has been rescheduled until Thursday, March 2, at 10 a.m. It had been continued until Friday, Feb. 24, but was rescheduled because the judge would be out of town on that date. The hearing has been continued three times previously after the building owners did not remove the buildings as ordered last summer. The hearing will be held in the City-County Building, Indianapolis.
Terraces helping conservationists adjust to changing agriculture
Terraces are one of the conservation practices which are helping the conservationist adjust to a changing agriculture. Although terraces have been used since the “Dust Bowl Era”, they are taking on a new look in the 1970’5. With greater needs for better water quality, terraces are now serving to control erosion and improve water quality. A terrace is a ridge. It is constructed across the field slope. A waterway is shaped behind the terrace. The terrace will stop and collect water runoff and the waterway will carry the runoff to an outlet. The outlet could be a grassed waterway. More commonly, a stand-pipe with slots is installed behind the terrace. A tile is installed up to the stand-pipe to handle the runoff. Several terraces are often used together on long slopes in order to provide adequate water
control. Can you use a terrace on your farm? The most common places for terraces are across natural drainage patterns. In the past, these areas would be shaped and seeded to fescue. However, success with waterways has lessened because farmers have gone to continuous row crop rotations. The chemicals applied to these crops were killing the grass. So, to still get erosion control, terraces are built across the waterway to handle the runoff. Terraces are advantageous because land may not have to be taken out of production. If the field slopes are not too steep, (0-6 per cent) terraces can be constructed and farmed. On steep slopes (more than 6 per cent) the terraces must be grassedbacked. The soil which erodes off the
field is caught behind the terrace. This is beneficial to water quality. Nationally, four billion tons of soil are washed into our lakes and streams each year. Terraces placed on intensively cropped or critically eroding fields can significantly reduce this soil loss. It is important to remember that terraces not only control erosion but also control water. Long slopes can yield a lot of runoff to lower areas. As a result, production on these lower areas is reduced. Properly installed terraces can cut this water off and direct the runoff to a planned outlet. As an incentive to build terraces, the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service (ASCS) offers a 75 per cent cost-share rate. The Soil Conservation Service (SCS) and ASCS offices work together in
applying conservation practices, including terraces. If you think we can be of assistance to you, call either office. County Cattlemen's annual meeting to be held March 7 The Kosciusko County Cattlemen’s annual meeting will be held at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 7, at the Shrine Building in Warsaw. Wayne Rothgeb, WKJG-TV farm director, will present his talk on “Farming-USA.” Roger Wasson, executive vice president of the Indiana Cattlemen’s Association will report on state and national activities. The Reflections, a musical group from Whitko High School, will provide the entertainment.
Wed., March 1, 1978 — THE MAIL-JOURNAL
B||ll Mlfey * JHHHHIHIHI r COMPUTER TERMINAL INSTALLED — The Grace College Library recently installed a computer terminal that ties them into a nationwide computer network. A 1977 graduate of the college, Vicki Debolt operates the unit as head librarian Robert Ibach, Jr., watches. Grace College students take advantage of gift
There are more than 1,000 students using the Grace College Library and many times each day information is needed about a book — the kind of information that usually appears on a good catalog card. This is a problem especially if the catalog card lacks information or if the book is not cataloged. Grace Librarian Robert D. Ibach, Jr., states this is no longer a major problem because the library received a delightful Christmas gift when a computer terminal was installed shortly before the holiday. The terminal made possible through an SB,OOO grant from the Kellogg Foundation of Battle Creek, Mich., enables the library to tie into a Nationwide computer network (with headquarters in Columbus, Ohio. With the computer, Grace librarians can catalog library materials utilizing the shared expertise of many libraries that use the system, including the Library of Congress. Founded by the Ohio College Association, the OCLC came into being in 1967 to increase availability of academic library resources and to slow the rate of rise of library ex-
March 3 deadline for filing nears
With the March 3 deadline for filing to run in the primary election drawing near, the following individuals have declared their intention to run. Delegate to state Republican convention — Duane F. Leedy, r 1 box 123 North Webster Township Trustee — Walter Wuthrich, Milford, Republican, Van Buren; Harlan J. Wuthrich, r 2 Milford, Republican, Jefferson; and Joseph D. Shewmon, 35 North Shore Drive, Syracuse, Republican, Turkey Creek Township advisory board — Jerry L. Rhodes, North Webster, Republican, Tippecanoe; William E. Metcalf, r 1 Leesburg, Republican, Tippecanoe; Roger E. Leinsetter, r 1 North Webster, Tippecanoe; Robert Tess, box 818 r 2 Claypool, Clay; Harry D. Alfrey, r 4 Syracuse, Republican, Turkey Creek; Jackson D. Ridings, r 2 Syracuse, Republican, Turkey Creek; Virgil Bobeck, r 2 Syracuse, Republican, Turkey Creek; Merril J. Rink, r 1 box 70A, Milford, Republican, Van Buren;
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penditures. There are 80,000 volumes in the Grace Library and three million records in the computer bank in Columbus. Information is also available on filmstrips, records and periodicals. Librarians converse with the Library Center computer through the keyboard and it answers on the screen. “The computers contain cataloging data, have the capacity to produce catalog cards on those books, or any that the Grace Library may wish to input, modified to the needs here,” Ibach said. He added that a book can be cataloged in minutes and the cards will be received from Columbus within days. Formerly, it took several months to get a new book cataloged. Inter-library loan, acquisitions, pre-catalog searching and bibliographic verification are also a part of the service. Vicki Debolt, 1977 graduate of Grace from Richwood, Ohio, operates the ter- . minal in the library. “It is really exciting to be able to type information and in a short while get a list of books by an author on the screen,” she stated.
and Charles A. Mikel, r 2 Nappanee, Republican, Jefferson Judge, superior court — C. Robert Burner, 403 W. Winona Ave., Warsaw, Republican Prosecutor of Kosciusko County — Michael L. Miner, r 2 Pierceton, Republican WaNee Community School Board — James W. Graybill, 22425 CR 42 r 5 Goshen Whitko School Board — Dale Haupert, r 1 South Whitley Precinct committeeman, Democratic — Fredonna A. Custer, r 1 Milford, plain Delegate to the state Democratic convention — Fredonna A. Custer, r 1 Milford County residents attend banquet Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ellison of r 3 Warsaw; Fred Scljpri, Max Beer and Byron Ulrich, all of Milford, attended the American Party dinner — reception at Fort Wayne on Saturday. “Free Market Economics’’ was the subject of the special address by Perry L.
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